Biden's campaign said the comment was meant to describe the diversity of political opinion among Latino Americans and was not a judgment on cultural diversity.

"If you look at the full video and transcript, it's clear that Vice President Biden was referring to diversity of attitudes among Latinos from different Latin American countries," Symone Sanders, a senior Biden campaign adviser, said in a statement. "The video that is circulating is conveniently cut to make this about racial diversity but that's not the case."

But only moments after his campaign responded to POLITICO on his interview, Biden again contrasted Latino and Black Americans - this time explicitly on the topic of national and cultural origin.

"We can build a new administration that reflects the full diversity of our nation. The full diversity of the Latino communities," Biden said. "Now when I mean full diversity, unlike African American community, many other communities, you're from everywhere. From Europe. From the tip of South America, all the way to our border and Mexico and in the Caribbean. And different backgrounds, different ethnicities, but all Latinos."

Biden made those remarks during the virtual National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials conference. His campaign did not immediately respond to a request for further comment concerning his NALEO talk.

President Donald Trump's campaign was quick to attack Biden over his NAHJ/NABJ interview, saying it diminishedthe diversity of opinions among Black voters and calling it an example of "condescending white liberal racism."

Katrina Pierson, a Trump campaign adviser, said in a statement that the former vice president "tells a group of Black reporters that 'you all know' that Black people think alike. There's a reason Joe Biden can't count on the support of Black voters and it's because of his plantation owner mentality."

"Joe Biden would rather we all just shut up, get in line, and know our place," she said.

Biden also drew criticism in May for saying that "you ain't Black" if "you have a problem figuring out whether you're for me or Trump." The Democratic candidate made the remarks during an interview with The Breakfast Club, a nationally syndicated radio show, and later apologized for his comments.

Biden enjoys considerable support from an overwhelming majority of Black voters. A Washington Post/Ipsos poll from June found that 92 percent of Black voters support the former vice president. Latino support for Biden, meanwhile, hovers closer to 60 percent.

Elsewhere in Biden's interview with the journalism associations, Biden bristled at a reporter's question about whether he has taken a cognitive test akin to the one Trump has bragged about acing. Biden replied to the question from CBS News correspondent Errol Barnett, who is Black, by saying "That's like saying to you, before you got on this program if you had taken a test were you taking cocaine or not. What do you think, huh? Are you a junkie?"

Biden's campaign defended those comments by calling Barnett's question "preposterous" and "deserving of a response that showed the absurdity of it all."

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