Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Biden sounds alarm for democracy

Calls for global action on authoritar­ianism, rights

- Joey Garrison

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden said preserving and strengthen­ing the world’s democracie­s is “the defining challenge of our time” Thursday morning as he kicked off an inaugural summit of global leaders to push back at the rise of authoritar­ianism.

“In the face of sustained and alarming challenges to democracy and universal human rights all around the world, democracy needs champions,” Biden said in remarks from the White House to about 80 world leaders attending the virtual summit.

Biden said he wants the “summit for democracy” to spark a “year of action” for the 110 participat­ing countries to follow through on commitment­s made during the two-day event.

As an example, he pointed to his administra­tion’s new “strategy on countering corruption.” It proposes rules to make it harder for corrupt actors to create shell companies to launder money or hide assets.

Biden urged participan­ts to stand for justice, the rule of law, free speech, free assembly, a free press and freedom of religion.

In the U.S., the president singled out Democratic-backed voting-rights legislatio­n – the Freedom to Vote Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Act – that Republican­s in the Senate have blocked.

“We should be making it easy for people to vote, not harder. And that’s going to remain a priority for my administra­tion until we get it done,” he said. “Inaction is not an option.”

Biden said “half of all democracie­s,” including the U.S., have experience­d a decline in at least one aspect of democracy over the last 10 years. He acknowledg­ed America’s own struggles with democracy.

A violent insurrecti­on on Jan. 6 at the U.S. Capitol waged by supporters of former President Donald Trump sought to stop the certification of Biden’s election win.

“Here in the United States, we know as well as anyone that renewing our democracy and strengthen­ing our democratic institutio­ns requires constant effort,” Biden said.

Biden said the summit is an opportunit­y for countries to “lock arms.” He urged leaders to share ideas and experience­s in fighting authoritar­ianism and corruption and in promoting human rights.

He called the moment “an inflection point,” adding that their choices will “fundamenta­lly determine the direction our world is going to take in the coming decades.”

The summit includes traditiona­l U.S. allies, as well as some countries that have authoritar­ian leanings – and poor human rights records – such as the Democratic Republic of Congo, Iraq and Pakistan. Countries that were not invited include Russia, China, Turkey and Hungary.

“We don’t agree with everything, all of us in this meeting day,” Biden said. “But the choices we make together are going to define, in my view, the course of our shared future for generation­s to come.”

Biden announced the U.S. would commit as much as $424 million next year to launch a new initiative for “democratic renewal” to support media freedom, combating corruption, defending elections and pushing other democratic principles worldwide.

Vice President Kamala Harris, addressing the summit in the afternoon, directly addressed the assault on the Capitol. “Jan. 6 looms large in our collective conscience,” Harris said. She slammed voting restrictio­ns enacted by Republican-led state legislatur­es as “part of an intentiona­l effort to exclude Americans from participat­ing in our democracy.”

The virtual gathering is the first of two, with a second in-person summit slated for late 2022 at the White House.

Participan­ts include activists, think tanks, business and union leaders in addition to government officials.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP ?? President Joe Biden speaks from the White House complex Thursday at the opening of a two-day virtual summit aimed at strengthen­ing democracy.
SUSAN WALSH/AP President Joe Biden speaks from the White House complex Thursday at the opening of a two-day virtual summit aimed at strengthen­ing democracy.

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