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		Biden says Trump fans 'flames of white supremacy' as Democrats attack 
		racism
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		 [August 08, 2019] 
		By Tim Reid and Harriet McLeod 
 LOS ANGELES/CHARLESTON, S.C. (Reuters) - 
		Democratic presidential front-runner Joe Biden on Wednesday accused 
		Republican President Donald Trump of fueling the white supremacy beliefs 
		blamed for several U.S. mass shootings, as Trump visited two cities 
		where 31 people were killed in rampages last weekend.
 
 "In both clear language and in code, this president has fanned the 
		flames of white supremacy in this nation," Biden, the former vice 
		president, said in a speech in Burlington, Iowa.
 
 Another contender for the Democratic presidential nomination, U.S. 
		Senator Cory Booker, took up the themes of white nationalism and gun 
		violence in a speech at the historically black South Carolina church 
		where white supremacist Dylann Roof shot dead nine people in 2015.
 
 "These acts of hatred do not happen in a vacuum," Booker said at Emanuel 
		African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston. "They are harvested 
		only once they have been planted."
 
		
		 
		
 The weekend's back-to-back mass shootings intensified criticism of what 
		many say is incendiary rhetoric by Trump.
 
 The president, who has insisted he is not a racist, said Americans must 
		"condemn racism, bigotry and white supremacy" in a speech on Monday.
 
 On Saturday, a gunman killed 22 people in El Paso, a Texas city on the 
		border with Mexico. Law enforcement agencies say the suspected gunman 
		was driven by hatred for Hispanics, citing an online manifesto 
		apparently written by the shooter that was rife with anti-immigrant 
		hatred.
 
 In the second mass shooting 13 hours later, a gunman in Dayton, Ohio, 
		fatally shot 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 renewed condemnation following 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 said in a fiery address.
 
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			2020 Democratic U.S. presidential candidate and former Vice 
			President Joe Biden speaks during a campaign stop in Burlington, 
			Iowa, U.S., August 7, 2019. REUTERS/Scott Morgan 
            
 
            Trump aides deny his rhetoric was a cause of the shootings. In his 
			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 
			stopped short of calling for major gun law reforms.
 Trump visited El Paso and Dayton on Wednesday, where he was greeted 
			by protesters.
 
 Biden and Booker are among 24 candidates vying to become the nominee 
			to take on Trump in the November 2020 election.
 
 Most of the Democrats have called for stricter gun laws, including 
			universal background checks for purchases and banning assault-style 
			weapons. Booker has also proposed requiring licenses to own 
			firearms.
 
 Biden invoked the rhetoric of previous presidents of both parties, 
			including Republican George W. Bush and Democrat Bill Clinton, who 
			he said "opposed hate."
 
 "We have a president who has aligned himself with the darkest forces 
			in the nation," Biden said in Iowa. "We have a president with a 
			toxic tongue who has publicly and unapologetically embraced a 
			political strategy of hate, racism, and division."
 
 In his remarks, Booker rejected the debate over whether Trump is a 
			racist, saying that what really matters is how people intend to 
			address the problem.
 
 "If the answer to the question, 'Do racism and white supremacy 
			exist?' is yes, then the real question isn't who is or isn't a 
			racist - but who is and isn't doing something about it," he said.
 
 (Reporting by Tim Reid and Harriet McLeod; additional reporting and 
			writing by Joseph Ax; editing by Larry King, Jonathan Oatis and 
			Leslie Adler)
 
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