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Biden: George Floyd's Death Shows 'Open Wound' of US Racism


FILE - Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden speaks in Wilmington, Del., March 12, 2020.
FILE - Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden speaks in Wilmington, Del., March 12, 2020.

Joe Biden said Friday that the "open wound" of systemic racism was behind the death of a black man in police custody in Minnesota. Biden also accused President Donald Trump, without mentioning him by name, of inciting violence with a tweet that warned that protesters could be shot.

"We are a country with an open wound. None of us can turn away," Biden said in a brief address.

The presumptive 2020 Democratic presidential nominee has built his campaign around a promise to heal "the soul of the nation" and is suddenly getting his chance to try in real time.

Biden said he spoke to the family of George Floyd, the man who died in Minneapolis this week after a white police officer knelt on his neck. Floyd's death touched off violent protests there and elsewhere.

The former vice president said now was "no time for incendiary tweets. No time to incite violence."

"This is time for real leadership," he said.

That was a reference to Trump, who at first condemned police action in Minneapolis. But the president later warned online that protesters could be shot, prompting Twitter to flag his tweet as glorifying violence. Twitter's move further escalated tensions between the White House and the social media platform, which fact-checked a tweet of his earlier this week.

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