Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Black officers break from unions over endorsemen­ts for Trump

- By Claudia Lauer

PHILADELPH­IA » Police unions nationwide have largely supported President Donald Trump’s reelection, amid mass demonstrat­ions over police brutality and accusation­s of systemic racism— but a number of Black lawenforce­ment officers are speaking out against these endorsemen­ts, saying their concerns over entering the 2020 political fray were ignored.

Trump has touted his support from the law enforcemen­t community, which includes endorsemen­ts from national, city and state officers’ unions— some of which publicly endorsed a political candidate for the first time. He’s running on what he calls a “law and order” platform and tapping into a strain of anger and frustratio­n felt by law enforcemen­t who believe they are being unfairly accused of racial discrimina­tion.

There are more than 8,000 law enforcemen­t agencies in the U. S., with large department­s holding sway nationally. The number of minority officers in policing has more than doubled in the last three decades, but many department­s still have a smaller percentage of Black and Hispanic officers compared to the percentage of the general population those communitie­s make up.

Many fraternal Black police organizati­ons were formed to advocate for equality within police department­s but also to focus on how law enforcemen­t affects the wider Black community. There have often been tensions between minority organizati­ons and larger unions, like in August, when the National Associatio­n of Black Law Enforcemen­t Officers issued a letter condemning use of deadly force, policemisc­onduct and abuse in communitie­s of color.

While support for the GOP incumbent does not strictly fall along racial lines, many Black officers say the endorsemen­ts for Trump don’t fairly represent all dues- paying members.

“We are members of these unions, and they don’t take into considerat­ion our feelings about Donald J. Trump, then they don’t care about us and ... they don’t care about our dues,” said Rochelle Bilal, the recent past president of the Guardian Civic League of Philadelph­ia, calling the National Fraternal Order of Police’s Trump endorsemen­t an “outrage.”

Bilal, who was elected as Philadelph­ia’s first Black female sheriff last year, spoke at an early October news conference with other Black law enforcemen­t groups in Philadelph­ia to condemn Trump endorsemen­ts and the process they say ignored their concerns over what they perceived to be racist remarks, support for white supremacis­t groups and a lack of respect for women from Trump.

But national union leaders say the process is designed to give everyone a voice and the endorsemen­t represents the majority of officers. The Fraternal Order of Police represents close to 350,000 officers nationally but does not track racial demographi­cs.

“I am a Black American and a Black law enforcemen­t officer,” said Rob Pride, the National Fraternal Order of Police chair of trustees. “It’s been emotionall­y a rollercoas­ter ride for me since the George Floyd incident. It was horrific.”

Pride, who oversees the vote that leads to the organizati­on’s presidenti­al endorsemen­t, says the May 25 police killing of Floyd in Minneapoli­s and the political climate “is tearing America apart” and having a similar effect on the FOP.

National FOP leaders said they have heard from members who don’t agree with the Trump endorsemen­t — and they’re open to talking over concerns— but that all 44 state Fraternal Orders of Police chapters that cast a ballot voted for Trump. Pride said the whole process starts locally, with lodges passing out candidate survey answers and ballots and then voting at a statewide meeting. State delegates then voted at the national meeting.

“We could probably have an hourlong conversati­on about why some folks feel President Trump is racist and why others disagree,” he said. “But there are a lot of officers of all races of all background­s who feel he best represents and supports the interests of law enforcemen­t.”

On the local level, police reform bills driven by protests against police brutality in the wake of Floyd’s killing have also stoked local unions’ endorsemen­ts of candidates for state offices at higher rates this year — some issuing endorsemen­t for thefirst time in decades. While many union leaders say the endorsemen­ts aren’t based on political parties, they have largely been for Republican­s challengin­g candidates who have voted for what unions call “antipolice” reform bills.

 ?? MICHAEL PEREZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Crystal Williams- Coleman, president of the Guardian Civic League, talks to reporters during a press conference in Philadelph­ia.
MICHAEL PEREZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Crystal Williams- Coleman, president of the Guardian Civic League, talks to reporters during a press conference in Philadelph­ia.

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