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		Biden says Trump's `toxic tongue' linked to U.S. mass shootings
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		 [August 07, 2019] 
		By Tim Reid 
 LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Democratic 
		presidential front-runner and former U.S. Vice President Joe Biden 
		accused President Donald Trump of fuelling the white supremacy that's 
		blamed for several mass shootings in the United States, according to a 
		speech Biden was due to deliver on Wednesday.
 
 Biden, 76, was scheduled to speak in Iowa after back-to-back mass 
		shootings this past weekend in the United States. In the first, on 
		Saturday, a gunman killed 22 people in El Paso, a Texas city on the 
		border with Mexico. Law enforcement agencies say he apparently was 
		driven by hatred for Hispanics.
 
 In the second mass shooting, a gunman in Dayton, Ohio, killed nine 
		people, including his sister, before he was killed by police.
 
 Trump's rhetoric, including calling Central Americans trying to enter 
		the United States "an invasion", and his hard-line immigration policies 
		have exposed him to condemnation since the El Paso shooting.
 
		
		 
		"How far is it from Trump's saying this 'is an invasion' to the shooter 
		in El Paso declaring 'his attack is a response to the Hispanic invasion 
		of Texas?' Not far at all," Biden was due to say, according to an 
		advance copy of his speech.
 "In both clear language and in code, this president has fanned the 
		flames of white supremacy in this nation."
 
 Trump aides deny his rhetoric was a cause of the shootings. In a 
		national address, the president proposed reforming mental health laws, 
		working with social media to detect possible mass shooters and keeping 
		guns away from people considered potentially violent. He plans to visit 
		El Paso on Wednesday.
 
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			Democratic 2020 presidential candidate and former U.S Vice President 
			Joe Biden gestures as he speaks at the UnidosUS Annual Conference, 
			in San Diego, California, U.S., August 5, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Blake 
            
 
            Biden is one of 24 candidates trying to become the nominee to take 
			on Trump in next November's election. Iowa is among the first states 
			to vote in the Democratic nomination process.
 Biden was expected to invoke the rhetoric of previous Republican and 
			Democratic presidents, including Republican George W. Bush and 
			Democrat Bill Clinton, who he said "opposed hate".
 
 In Trump, Biden was due to say, "we have a president who has aligned 
			himself in the darkest forces in the nation. We have a president 
			with a toxic tongue who has publicly and unapologetically embraced a 
			political strategy of hate, racism, and division."
 
 (Reporting by Tim Reid, editing by Larry King)
 
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