U.S. presidential candidate Cory Booker proposes office to fight white
supremacy
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[August 15, 2019]
By Joseph Ax
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. Senator Cory
Booker on Thursday said he would create a White House office to combat
white supremacy and hate crimes if elected, becoming the latest
Democratic presidential candidate to call for action after a racially
motivated massacre in Texas.
Booker said he would also require the FBI and the Justice Department to
allocate the same level of resources and attention to white
supremacist-inspired violence as they devote to international terrorism.
The New Jersey senator announced his plan less than two weeks after a
gunman in El Paso, Texas, killed 22 people inside a Walmart after
posting an anti-immigrant screed online that echoed some of President
Donald Trump's heated rhetoric. The attack was among three mass
shootings in the span of a week that killed 34 people in all.
The incidents have roiled the presidential race, with Democrats accusing
Trump, a Republican, of fomenting hatred while failing to embrace
common-sense gun restrictions. Several candidates, including Senator
Kamala Harris on Wednesday, have released plans to fight gun violence
and white supremacy in the days since the El Paso massacre.
Trump, who has said he is not a racist, has expressed support in the
wake of the shooting for "red flag" laws that limit access to guns for
dangerous people and a potential expansion of background checks for gun
purchases. He has not endorsed any specific legislation.
Last week, at a historically black church in Charleston, South Carolina,
where a white supremacist gunned down nine people in 2015, Booker
criticized Trump's language while linking the El Paso shooting to the
United States' long history of racism.
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Democratic U.S. Presidential candidate Senator Cory Booker addresses
the audience during the Presidential candidate forum at the annual
convention of the National Association for
the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), in Detroit, Michigan,
U.S., July 24, 2019. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook/File Photo
"To say this is to speak the truth plainly, because with the truth
there can be no reconciliation," said Booker, who is
African-American.
The proposal builds upon Booker's sweeping anti-gun violence plan
that would, among other things, establish a national licensing
program for gun ownership.
Booker's campaign likened his proposed White House Office on Hate
Crimes and White Supremacist Violence to other agencies that
presidents have convened to coordinate responses to major domestic
crises, such as the White House Office of AIDS Policy.
Under his proposal, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other
law enforcement agencies would be required to conduct assessments of
white supremacist threats and improve reporting of hate crimes.
Booker would also create an advisory group of leaders from
communities hurt by hate crimes to advise his administration.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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