Joe Biden referred to “coloured kids” during his first speech since exiting the White House.
The former president used the an offensive term for African-American people while reminiscing about his childhood and the divisive forces that propelled him into public service decades ago.
“I’d never seen … hardly any black people in Scranton at the time, and I was only going to fourth grade,” he said during his speech about social security.
“And I remember seeing the kids going by at the time, called coloured kids on a bus going by …,” Mr Biden said during a keynote speech in Chicago on Tuesday night.
The term “coloured” may have been commonplace when the 82-year-old was growing up, but today it is considered deeply offensive for the way it reflects a world of white people and everyone else.
The faux pas will likely remind Democrats of why he was forced out of the 2024 election.
The term harks back to a time of segregation, when drinking fountains would be labelled “coloured only”.
The word was quickly seized on by Mr Biden’s opponents online to ridicule his return to the stage, almost three months since he left the White House.
The speech was billed as his first major intervention since Donald Trump took office and a chance to fire a warning shot across efforts by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency to slash the federal workforce.