Biden to headline anti-extremism conference

President Joe Biden has made what he calls an existential threat to the viability of democracy around the world a centerpiece of his message since taking office in January 2021

Washington (AFP) - President Joe Biden will host a conference on combating racist, anti-democratic and other extremist threats in September, less than two months before tense midterm elections, the White House said Friday.

The "United We Stand" summit on September 15 will address "the corrosive effects of hate-fueled violence on our democracy and public safety," said Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre.

In addition to laying out the Biden government's response to what it says is a dangerous spread of extremist violence, it will "put forward a shared vision for a more united America," she said in a statement.

Citing mass-shootings that targeted Black, Hispanic, and Asian Americans over recent years, Jean-Pierre said "Americans remain overwhelmingly united in their opposition to such violence."

Biden has made what he calls an existential threat to the viability of democracy around the world a centerpiece of his message since taking office in January 2021.

He says he campaigned for the presidency to topple Donald Trump after just one term because of the Republican's initial failure to condemn a violent, high-profile white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017.

The 79-year-old will give the main speech at the event, also set to feature representatives from law enforcement, business and civil society. Both Democrats and Republicans are being invited, the White House said.

In addition to Biden's address, the conference will see "inclusive, bipartisan panels and conversations on countering hate-fueled violence, preventing radicalization and mobilization to violence, and fostering unity," Jean-Pierre said.

The conference is scheduled just over seven weeks before congressional midterms, in which Republicans, many supportive of Trump's ongoing attempt to undermine confidence in the 2020 presidential election, are hoping to take control of Congress.

While some Democrats have taken the highly unusual step of urging Biden not to run again for a second term in 2024, citing his age, the veteran politician, who is also a former senator and vice president, says he is running.

Biden has repeatedly cast himself as a bulwark against what he sees as an anti-democratic surge both in the United States and abroad, and is believed to consider himself the best candidate to defeat Trump, should the Republican also run again.

© Agence France-Presse