In Memorial Day speech, Biden defends 'imperfect' democracy
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[June 01, 2021]
By Andrea Shalal
ARLINGTON, Va. (Reuters) - U.S. President
Joe Biden used his Memorial Day speech on Monday to defend America's
"imperfect" democracy, calling for more work to deliver the promise of
what he said remained "the greatest experiment" in world history.
In a speech at Arlington National Cemetery touching on voting rights,
freedom of speech and efforts to rectify persistent economic and racial
disparities, Biden warned that democracy was "in peril" in the United
States and around the world in the face of autocratic forces he did not
identify.
"Democracy is more than a form of government, it's a way of being, a way
of seeing the world. Democracy means the rule of the people," Biden said
in a speech to honor one million Americans who have lost their lives in
military service.
"The struggle for democracy is taking place around the world - democracy
and autocracy. The struggle for decency, dignity, just simple decency,"
he said.
Speaking in the largely empty Arlington Memorial Amphitheater with the
nation still in the grip of the coronavirus pandemic, Biden said 7,036
people had died in recent U.S. conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan,
serving the ideals of the United States and democracy as a vibrant form
of government. "They lived for it, they died for it," he said.
"We owe the honored dead ... our full best efforts to perfect the Union
for which they died."
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President Joe Biden puts a note with the number of U.S. soldiers
killed in Iraq and Afghanistan is his pocket as he delivers the
Memorial Day speech during the National Memorial Day observance at
Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia, U.S. May 31,
2021. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
Biden has announced plans to withdraw U.S. troops
from Afghanistan this year after the longest ever U.S. overseas
engagement. He has also pointed to what he has describes as
autocratic rule in China and Russia as major challenges faced by the
United States.
As many U.S. states work to pass laws that critics argue are
intended to suppress minority voting, Biden also stressed the need
for people to have the right to vote "freely and fairly and
conveniently" and for the rule of law to apply "equally and fairly
to every citizen, regardless of where they come from, what they look
like."
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal, David Brunnstrom; Editing by Bill
Berkrot)
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