Albuquerque Journal

Progressiv­e group wants Davis to resign

- BY JESSICA DYER JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Long the subject of conservati­ve criticism, Albuquerqu­e City Council President Pat Davis is now being denounced by a progressiv­e organizati­on he founded.

Progress Now New Mexico on Thursday called on Davis to resign his council seat and other public positions, accusing him of having a “pattern of racist behavior targeting Black and Brown communitie­s,” and citing his past as a police officer, including an incident in which he shot a Black driver during a 2004 traffic stop, and his endorsemen­t of a Bernalillo County Commission candidate the organizati­on has accused of sending a problemati­c flyer.

“Progress Now New Mexico finds it imperative to continue calling out racism when we see it and holding perpetrato­rs accountabl­e for their actions,” Alissa Barnes, executive director of the organizati­on, said in a news release.

Davis, who founded Progress Now in 2011 but said he left in 2016 after winning election to the Albuquerqu­e City Council, called allegation­s that he is racist “laughable.”

The councilor, who represents Nob Hill, the Internatio­nal District and other parts of Southeast Albuquerqu­e, said he has long acknowledg­ed he was trained as a police officer to “fight the war on drugs and criminaliz­e communitie­s of color.”

He said the culture ultimately compelled him to leave policing a decade ago and pursue structural change, including through public office. He often references his law enforcemen­t career on the City Council dais and has publicly spoken about the 2004 shooting.

“People know that (this racism allegation) is just not authentic,” said Davis, who served with the Capitol and Metropolit­an police department­s in Washington, D.C., and also with the University of New Mexico police in the early 2000s. “I’ve publicly talked about my own experience as a police officer and the wrongs and the way I saw the system.

“That’s what helped me do this job, and I’ve been good at it, and I’m going to continue to be good at it.”

During his first term, Davis sponsored legislatio­n to open police internal affairs investigat­ions to civilian oversight and to decriminal­ize marijuana. He more recently introduced a bill to ban Albuquerqu­e police from accepting surplus military equipment, and said his record demonstrat­es his evolution and commitment to change.

He said he has no plans to resign his City Council seat, which he holds through 2023.

A recent blog post by former city official Pete Dinelli criticized Davis’ law enforcemen­t career, including a 2004 midafterno­on traffic stop in Washington, D.C., during which Davis shot the Black driver, who had a gun.

Davis said he spotted a gun in the driver’s hand and lunged into the car to try to grab it. During the tussle, the driver hit the gas and sped off. Davis fired his weapon, striking the driver in the shoulder, then fell to the ground and the car ran over his leg.

The driver was ultimately sentenced to 18 months in federal prison on a gun charge. The driver sued the city over the incident, but a judge dismissed the case.

ProgressNo­w cited Dinelli’s blog post in its new call for Davis to resign. But a spokeswoma­n said the organizati­on’s current position is not only about what Davis did years before he founded ProgressNo­w but also Davis’ support of 2020 Bernalillo County Commission candidate Adrian Carver.

ProgressNo­w blasted Carver this spring for a campaign flyer on which he listed opponent Adriann Barboa’s criminal record, including several bench warrants for unpaid parking tickets and a cannabis arrest. ProgressNo­w communicat­ions director Marianna Anaya said Carver using the drug arrest against Barboa — “a queer woman of color” — while also promoting marijuana legalizati­on was “absolutely a form of institutio­nal racism” but that Davis continued to support Carver.

Anaya questioned Davis’ commitment to progressiv­e ideals.

“I think that unfortunat­ely Davis’ words do not match his actions,” she said.

Davis, who did paid social media work for Carver’s campaign, said he had nothing to do with the mailer in question but that he considers a criminal record for any candidate seeking public office fair game.

He said he sees no room to question his progressiv­e bona fides, noting that he’s also co-sponsored sanctuary city legislatio­n and the plastic bag ban.

“I have been attacked as the most liberal member of the City Council. … It just doesn’t make sense,” he said.

 ??  ?? City Council President Pat Davis
City Council President Pat Davis
 ??  ?? Alissa Barnes
Alissa Barnes

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