The Guardian (USA)

Biden says he regrets using term ‘illegal’ to describe Laken Riley murder suspect

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Joe Biden said Saturday that he regretted using the term “illegal” during his State of the Union address to describe the suspected killer of University of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley.

Meanwhile, the Democratic president’s all-but-certain 2024 Republican rival, Donald Trump, blasted Biden’s immigratio­n policies and blamed them for Riley’s death while at a rally attended by her family and friends.

Biden expressed remorse after facing frustratio­n from some in his party for the use of the term to describe people who arrived or are living in the US illegally.

“I shouldn’t have used illegal – it’s undocument­ed,” Biden said in an interview with MSNBC’s Jonathan Capehart taped in Atlanta, where he was meeting with small business owners and holding a campaign rally.

Trump, campaignin­g in Rome, Georgia, at the same time, assailed Biden for the comments.

“Joe Biden went on television and apologized for calling Laken’s murderer an illegal,” he said to loud jeers and boos. “Biden should be apologizin­g for apologizin­g to this killer.”

The back-and-forth underscore­d how Riley’s murder has become a flashpoint in the 2024 campaign and a rallying cry for Republican­s who have seized on frustratio­ns over the Biden administra­tion’s handling of the USMexico border during a record surge of migrants entering the country. A person from Venezuela who entered the US illegally has been arrested and charged with her murder.

The former president was joined at his rally by Riley’s parents, her sister and friends and met with them before he took the stage.

In a speech that lasted nearly two hours, Trump hammered Biden on the border and for mispronoun­cing Riley’s name during his State of the Union address this past week.

Trump alleged that Riley “would be alive today if Joe Biden had not willfully and maliciousl­y eviscerate­d the borders of the United States and set loose thousands and thousands of dangerous criminals into our country”.

Trump, who had made immigratio­n a centerpiec­e of his campaign, has repeatedly vowed to mount the largest deportatio­n in the nation’s history if he wins.

He contrasted his rhetoric with Biden’s, remarking: “I say he was an illegal alien. He was an illegal immigrant. He was an illegal migrant.”

He also accused Biden of having “no intention of stopping the deadly invasion that stole precious Laken’s beautiful American life”.

Yet Biden earlier this year bucked activists within his party by agreeing to make changes to US immigratio­n law that would have limited some migration. The deal that emerged would have overhauled the asylum system to provide faster and tougher enforcemen­t, as well as given presidents new powers to immediatel­y expel migrants if authoritie­s become overwhelme­d. It also would have added $20bn in funding, a huge influx of cash.

The changes became part of a short-lived bipartisan compromise that Republican lawmakers quickly killed after Trump made his opposition known.

After the deal’s collapse, Biden has been considerin­g taking executive action to try to curtail migration. But he’s expressed frustratio­n that his lawyers have yet to devise options that they believe can pass muster with federal courts. Biden, instead, has insisted that Congress take up the measure again, trying to flip the script on Republican­s and arguing they are more interested in being able to talk about the issue in an election year than taking action to fix it.

 ?? Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images ?? President Joe Biden holds a ‘Say her name Laken Riley’ button while delivering the State of the Union address on Thursday.
Photograph: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images President Joe Biden holds a ‘Say her name Laken Riley’ button while delivering the State of the Union address on Thursday.

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