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Biden marks 60th anniversary of March on Washington in wake of Jacksonville shooting: ‘We’re not going to remain silent’

<i>Susan Walsh/AP</i><br/>President Joe Biden speaks as he and Vice President Kamala Harris meet with organizers of the 60th anniversary of the March on Washington in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington on Aug. 28.
Susan Walsh/AP
President Joe Biden speaks as he and Vice President Kamala Harris meet with organizers of the 60th anniversary of the March on Washington in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington on Aug. 28.

By Donald Judd, CNN

(CNN) — President Joe Biden on Monday marked the 60th anniversary of the March on Washington while issuing a stark warning about the rise of extremism in the United States in the wake of the racist shooting in Jacksonville, Florida, this weekend.

“A lot’s happening around things you wouldn’t think would be happening today on the anniversary of the 60 years of the March,” Biden said while meeting with civil rights leaders at the White House, referencing the shooting in Jacksonville that left three Black people dead when a White gunman opened fire at a Dollar General store. The gunman left racist writings and used racial slurs before launching the attack.

Biden added, “I’ve said to the country we can’t let hate prevail, and it’s on the rise. It’s not diminishing. Silence is, I believe – and I’ve said many times – silence is complicity. We’re not going to remain silent.”

Later Monday, the president, during remarks to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the founding of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, said that law enforcement had opened a federal civil rights investigation into the shooting “to treat this terror as a possible hate crime, the act of domestic violent extremism it clearly is.”

He warned that White supremacy “has been allowed to grow faster and fester in our communities,” to the point where the US intelligence community has in recent years labeled it the most lethal domestic terror threat in the country.

In his remarks Monday night, Biden also noted what he called “the relentless exploitation of the internet to recruit and mobilize violent extremists,” while acknowledging the challenge between balancing the First Amendment right to free speech with the threat of online radicalization.

During his earlier meeting with the group of civil rights leaders, including family members of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., the president cautioned against the growing trend in red states across the nation – including Florida – of restricting the teaching of Black history in an ongoing battle against what Republicans have called “woke” ideology in schools.

“We have to speak out, there’s a whole group of extreme people trying to erase history, trying to walk away from it,” Biden said. “I mean, the idea that we’re sitting here – I never thought I’d be president, let alone be president and having a discussion about why books are being banned in schools.”

Earlier this year, the White House announced the Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights will appoint a new coordinator specifically tasked with combating book bans enacted at the state and local level.

In March, the American Library Association released data documenting 1,269 demands to censor library books and resources in 2022, marking the highest number of attempted book bans since the association began compiling the data more than 20 years ago.

And an April report from free speech organization PEN America found book bans rose during the first half of the 2022-23 school year. Almost a third of the bans were the result of newly enacted state laws, according to the report, which found bans were most prevalent in five states: Texas, Florida, Missouri, Utah and South Carolina.

Biden told CNN’s Jeremy Diamond Monday that he has yet to speak to the families of the three victims in the Jacksonville shooting, but that he remained in contact with authorities on the ground.

“And right now, I asked whether or not it was appropriate … to contact the families,” Biden said. “Two of them are prepared to be contacted, one does not want to be contacted. I’m letting this just – let things settle, because everyone deals with profound loss in a different way, and I know from experience, it’s important to do it in a way that’s most helpful and eases the anxiety most, so I haven’t spoken to them yet.”

Biden was joined by members of the King family, Rev. Al Sharpton, Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt, and Vice President Kamala Harris, who traveled to Florida earlier this year to lambast the state’s newly approved set of standards for teaching Black history, where she warned Republican leaders in the state were trying to “replace history with lies.”

“The vast majority of us have so much more in common than what separates us, yet there are those who are intentionally trying to divide us as a nation, and I believe each of us has a duty, a duty to not allow factions to sever our unity,” Harris said Monday.

Speaking with reporters following Monday’s meeting, Sharpton told reporters he called on the president to hold a follow up to 2022’s White House-hosted summit on countering hate-fueled violence – this time, in Jacksonville.

“It was an open and very candid meeting, but we leave here determined to continue to stand together across racial lines and generations and try and make this country move forward as they stood out on the Mall 60 years ago today and stood for a dream,” Sharpton said.

And Marc Morial, who chairs the National Urban League, told reporters Biden “was introspective and prospective in his comments today,” adding he believes the president “clearly understands the issues that face this country.”

“So, we’re united with this president and with this administration, not simply in a fight for public policy, but a fight for the future of America,” he said.

This story has been updated with additional reporting.

The-CNN-Wire
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CNN’s Jack Forrest contributed to this report.

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