The Standard (St. Catharines)

Biden, key Democrats spurn calls to defund police

- STEVE PEOPLES, ALAN FRAM AND JONATHAN LEMIRE

WASHINGTON—U.S. President Donald Trump and his allies have seized on calls to “defund the police” as a dangerous example of Democratic overreach as he fights for momentum amid crises that threaten his reelection.

Key Democrats, including presumptiv­e presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden, are distancing themselves from the “defund” push, which some supporters say is a symbolic commitment to end systemic racism and shift policing priorities rather than an actual plan to eliminate law enforcemen­t agencies.

But confusion over the proposal’s intent has created an opportunit­y for the Republican president, who has struggled to navigate the delicate debate over racial justice, risking support from people of colour, suburban women and independen­ts less than five months before election day.

Facing increasing pressure to weigh in, Biden addressed the issue Monday in an interview with “CBS Evening News.”

“I don’t support defunding the police. I support conditioni­ng federal aid to police based on whether or not they meet certain basic standards of decency, honourable­ness and, in fact, are able to demonstrat­e they can protect the community, everybody in the community,” Biden said.

Other opponents of the movement include Sen. Cory Booker, a former presidenti­al candidate and one of two Black Democratic senators, and Rep. Karen Bass, head of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus.

NAACP president Derrick Johnson, in an interview, also declined to endorse calls to defund the police.

“I support the energy behind it. I don’t know what that substantiv­ely means. As I’m talking to people about the concept, I’ve gotten three different explanatio­ns,” said Johnson, who has criticized Trump. “We know there has to be a change in the culture of policing in this country.”

Democrats are well-positioned to win over the political centre this fall, according to Republican pollster Frank Luntz, who said Trump’s uneven actions and rhetoric at a time of sweeping social unrest are “killing him.”

Luntz added, however, that Democrats risk their advantage by embracing policies viewed as radical following the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. The handcuffed Black man died after a white officer pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck for more than eight minutes.

Municipal officials in Minneapoli­s have endorsed the “defund

the police” language backed by some civil rights activists and a handful of progressiv­e House Democrats. Protesters over the weekend also painted “DEFUND THE POLICE” in large yellow letters on a street close to the White House.

But there was little evidence that the effort was gaining momentum in Congress. Some Democrats described it as bad politics, even if most Democrats shared the desire to overhaul policing.

Former senator Heidi Heitkamp, a white moderate who lost her 2018 re-election bid, said “defund the police” is “a horrible name” that misconstru­es the goal.

“By starting with the word ‘defund,’ you’ve left the impression that you are doing something much more radical than what needs to be done,” said Heitkamp, a leader of the One Country Project, which is trying to help Democrats connect better with rural voters.

She said the term left her frustrated that “there’s going to be somebody who’s going to try to find an opportunit­y in this, especially among the Republican party, and use it now as an excuse not to address what is a very real problem in America.”

 ?? RAGAN CLARK
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters march in New York on June 6. The push to defund police isn’t well-received among key Democrats.
RAGAN CLARK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters march in New York on June 6. The push to defund police isn’t well-received among key Democrats.

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