“I just don’t see the point of taking shots at myself when other people have been shooting at me,” he said, referencing his survival of two assassination attempts.
Of Biden, he said, “If the Democrats really wanted to have someone not be with us this evening, they would have sent Joe Biden.”
Later, he said the current occupant of the White House “can barely talk, barely put together two coherent sentences, who seems to have the mental faculties of a child. This is a person that has nothing going, no intelligence whatsoever. But enough about Kamala Harris.”
In the video she recorded for the occasion, Harris appeared alongside comedian and actress Molly Shannon, who reprised her long-running Saturday Night Live character Mary Katherine Gallagher, an awkward Catholic schoolgirl. Harris also poked fun at Trump for comments he made in Michigan, saying that mocking Catholics in the video would be “like criticising Detroit in Detroit”.
Harris’ campaign had previously said that, with less than three weeks before election day, they wanted her to spend as much time as possible campaigning in battleground states that will decide the election, rather than detouring to heavily Democratic New York. Her team told organisers that she would be willing to attend the dinner as president if she wins.
Melania Trump attended in a rare appearance
Trump was joined at the dinner by wife Melania, who has been an infrequent presence on the campaign trail.
The dais included a mix of Trump allies and foes, with various entanglements. They included New York Attorney-General Letitia James, who brought a successful civil fraud case against Trump and his business. Robert F. Kennedy Jr, who endorsed Trump after dropping his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, attended with his wife, Cheryl Hines.
Embattled New York Mayor Eric Adams and other top city officials, as well as business leaders and sports and media personalities, were also in attendance. Adams was charged last month with accepting illegal campaign contributions and lavish overseas trips from Turkish officials and businesspeople. The case that was mentioned repeatedly, including by Trump.
Trump has claimed, without evidence, that Adams was targeted by authorities because he criticised Biden’s migrant policies.
“Mayor Adams: Good luck with everything,” Trump said, adding that what Adams faces is “peanuts” compared to his own legal woes.
He also went after former New York mayor Bill de Blasio, who was repeatedly booed by the crowd.
“To be honest, he was a terrible mayor,” Trump said before offering a profanity at a religion-themed event. “I don’t give a shit if this is comedy or not.”
Loading
Trump’s tone echoed his appearance in 2016, when he was joined by his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, and delivered a particularly nasty speech, calling her “corrupt”.
“Hillary believes that it’s vital to deceive the people by having one public policy and a totally different policy in private,” he said to jeers at the 2016 dinner. “For example, here she is tonight, in public, pretending not to hate Catholics.”
Mary Callahan Erdoes, vice chair of the foundation, alluded to that past speech when she introduced Trump, suggesting she hoped for something less caustic.
Trump, too, referenced the performance onstage, saying that, in 2016, he “went overboard. That was, like, terrible. And I knew I was in trouble midway through.”
That didn’t stop him, however, from similar attacks.
The Harris campaign responded to Trump’s speech with a statement saying it would remind “Americans how unstable he’s become”.
Trump’s sense of humour is often cited by his supporters as key to his appeal. While he infamously glowered through then-president Barack Obama’s jokes at his expense during the 2011 White House Correspondents Dinner, he also sometimes pokes fun at himself.
The Alfred E Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner is named for the former New York governor, a Democrat who was the first Catholic to receive a major-party nomination for president when he unsuccessfully ran for the White House in 1928.
The event has become a tradition for presidential candidates since Richard Nixon and John F. Kennedy appeared together in 1960.
AP
Sign up for our What in the world newsletter to get a special US election wrap-up every Tuesday plus a note from our foreign correspondents around the globe each Thursday.