Biden warns 'forces of darkness' dividing US, urges unity

Democratic US presidential candidate Joe Biden used his speech in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania as a call for unity in a divided America, but also warned that

Gettysburg (United States) (AFP) - White House hopeful Joe Biden warned on Tuesday that "the forces of darkness" are dividing Americans, saying that as president he would strive to "end the hate and fear" consuming the nation. 

In a speech at an outdoor site overlooking the hallowed Civil War battlefield of Gettysburg, the Democratic challenger to President Donald Trump in November's election condemned the rise of white nationalism and said the country needed to unite.

"The forces of darkness, the forces of division, the forces of yesterday are pulling us apart, holding us down and holding us back," Biden said in a speech near where president Abraham Lincoln delivered his inspirational Gettysburg Address during a cemetery dedication here in 1863.

"We cannot and will not allow extremists and white supremacists to overturn the America of Lincoln and (abolitionists) Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglass, to overturn the America that has been a haven and a home for everyone no matter their background," Biden added.

The 77-year-old former vice president who leads in polling four weeks from election day did not mention Trump's name, but his remarks served as a clear rebuke of a Republican president whose relentless rhetoric has raised tensions nationwide.

The Democrat's speech, attended by a small contingent of Biden supporters abiding by social distancing rules, notably came one week after Trump, who has branded himself a "law and order" president, failed to directly condemn white nationalism during their contentious debate in Cleveland.

"I do not believe we have to choose between law and order and racial justice in America. We can have both," Biden said.

But he stressed that "as president... I will send a clear unequivocal message to the entire nation: There is no place for hate in America. It will be given no license, it will be given no oxygen, it will be given no safe harbor."

His speech was intended to serve as a call for unity after months of bitter divisions, but he also said he was "concerned" about what he sees today.

"The country is in a dangerous place, our trust in each other is ebbing, hope seems elusive," and politics is no longer a forum for mediating differences but a battleground for "total, unrelenting partisan warfare," he said.

The veteran Democrat repeatedly invoked the language of Lincoln in his speech, saying "there's no more fitting place than here today, in Gettysburg, to talk about the cost of division."

"Today once again, we are a house divided. But that, my friends, can no longer be," Biden said.

© Agence France-Presse