USA TODAY US Edition

Biden rips Trump amid protests

Candidate speaks at Philadelph­ia City Hall

- Rebecca Morin

WASHINGTON – Former Vice President Joe Biden offered some of his harshest criticism of President Donald Trump for his handling of protests after George Floyd’s death, and he called on Congress to address systemic racism.

“It’s going to take the work of a generation,” Biden said at Philadelph­ia City Hall Tuesday morning. “But if this agenda will take time to complete, it should not wait for the first 100 days of my administra­tion to start.”

The Democratic presidenti­al candidate’s remarks followed days of protests across the nation over the death of George Floyd in police custody. Trump has condemned the protests, some of which have led to looting and rioting in several cities.

Biden said he will release a broader agenda to rectify racial inequities in the coming weeks. His plan begins with health care, he said, and “the quickest route to universal coverage in this country is to expand Obamacare.”

Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee, said, “This president today is part of the problem and accelerate­s it. When he tweeted the words, ‘When the looting starts, the shooting starts,’ they weren’t the words of a president. They were words of a racist Miami police chief in the ‘60s.

“I wish I could say that hate began with Donald Trump and will end with him,” Biden continued. “It didn’t, and it won’t.”

Katrina Pierson, a senior adviser to Trump’s presidenti­al campaign, said in a statement Tuesday that Biden has “used the politics of racial division when they suited his needs, and he is doing it again.”

“In contrast, President Trump has addressed the nation twice, expressed horror and sorrow for the death of George Floyd, stood with the peaceful protesters and made it clear that he would not abide our cities being overtaken by violent, uncontroll­able rioters,” Pierson said in the statement.

Biden attempted to contrast his messaging with Trump’s, saying, “I won’t traffic in fear and division. I won’t fan the flames of hate.

The former vice president slammed Trump after authoritie­s in Washington used tear gas to clear peaceful protesters from Lafayette Square so the president could pose in front of St. John’s Episcopal Church near the White House.

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