Biden hosts anti-extremism ‘summit’ at White House


United States President Joe Biden's anti-extremism summit at the White House comes two weeks after he delivered a fiery speech denouncing the extreme ideology of former president Donald Trump. – EPA pic, September 15, 2022.

PRESIDENT Joe Biden will address a White House conference today on “hate-motivated violence” in his latest bid to call out what he sees as a dangerous tide of extremism across the country, officials said.

The event, dubbed “the United We Stand Summit”, will highlight “the corrosive effects of hate-fueled violence on our democracy and public safety”, the White House said in a statement.

The statement cited a deadly racist attack on an African-American church in Charleston, South Carolina, in 2015, a mass shooting targeting Latinos in El Paso, Texas, in 2019, and another gun massacre, this time targeting African-Americans, in Buffalo, New York, in May this year, as the kind of “hateful attacks” threatening the nation.

The summit comes just eight weeks ahead of midterm elections, in which Republicans are seeking to take control of Congress. 

It also comes just two weeks after Biden delivered a fiery speech denouncing the “extreme ideology” of former president Donald Trump, whose supporters overran the Capitol to try to overturn the 2020 election and who continues to promote far-right conspiracy theories.

A White House official told reporters that today’s event, which will feature a panel with both Republican and Democratic mayors, is not political and would “demonstrate that we can unite across partisan lines”.

A cross-section of civil rights activists, religious leaders, academics and elected officials such as mayors will be among those attending, with Biden set to deliver the main address.

“The summit will put forward a shared vision for a more united America, demonstrating that the vast majority of Americans agree that there is no place for hate-fueled violence in our country, and that when Americans stand united to renew civic bonds and heal divides, we can help prevent acts of hate and violence,” the White House said.

“Today’s summit is just the beginning.” – AFP, September 15, 2022.


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