WASHINGTON: Joe Biden pledges to undo Muslim ban on his first day in office
WASHINGTON: Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden
has said that he would overturn President Donald Trump’s Muslim ban on his
first day in office and partner with Muslims to undo the social harms caused by
such measures.
In a speech to Engage
Action, an advocacy group for Muslim Americans, on Monday afternoon, the former
vice president also said that Muslims were the first to suffer attacks under
the Trump administration.
“Donald Trump has fanned
the flames of hate in this country across the board through his words, his
policies, his appointments and his deeds,” he said. “I will undo the Muslim ban
on day one.”
During his first month in
office in January 2017, President Trump restricted travel from seven
Muslim-majority countries. The restrictions were altered during a series of
court challenges and some non-Muslim countries, such as North Korea and
Venezuela, were also added to the list. The order was eventually upheld by
the US Supreme Court.
The US media dubbed the order a “Muslim ban” because
Mr Trump had previously called for temporarily banning Muslims from entering
the United States. The president argued that the restrictions were necessary to
protect Americans from future terrorist attacks.
In his speech to the
Muslim advocacy group, Mr Biden accused President Trump of continuing to fan
the flames of hate that led to kids being bullied in school and an increase in
hate crimes. “Under this administration, we’ve seen an unconscionable rise in
Islamophobia,” he said.
Mr Biden also accused Mr
Trump of appointing open advocates of Islamophobia in key positions in the
Defence Department and the US Agency for International Development (USAID).
During its day-long
proceedings, the group vowed to bring one million Muslim voters to the polls on
Nov 3. Its chairman, Khurrum Wahid, said the group would work in swing states
like Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Florida to persuade Muslim voters to
support Mr Biden. “We want to partner with you to fix the societal harm of this
Trump presidency,” he said.
Mr Biden said that Muslim
communities in America were the first to feel Donald Trump’s assault on
minority groups, with this ‘vile Muslim ban.’ “That fight was the opening
barrage in what has been nearly four years of constant pressure and insults,
and attacks against Muslim American communities.” Mr Biden pledged he would
work with Congress on legislation to discourage hate crimes and to abolish
religious and racial profiling by authorities.
time of thinking,
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