Las Vegas Review-Journal

Senate GOP pushes police reform bill

- Newsmax

WASHINGTON — Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell has set the stage for an early showdown vote Wednesday over legislatio­n to overhaul policing practices across the nation after George Floyd’s May 25 death while under restraint by Minneapoli­s police.

The Senate will vote on a motion to bring up a GOP measure that would boost accountabi­lity and training for police officers and make lynching a federal crime for the first time.

But Democrats in both chambers have a joint proposal that goes further, including a provision that would end the “qualified immunity” that shields police officers from lawsuits if they operate in “good faith.”

Republican­s lack the 60 votes needed to advance their legislatio­n, so Mcconnell will need some Democrats to consider supporting the bill.

Democratic leaders want assurances that they’ll have a chance to amend it. Otherwise, Democrats could block the legislatio­n and potentiall­y doom its prospects before the 2020 elections.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi indicated last week she was anticipati­ng negotiatio­ns with the Senate over the competing versions after her chamber passes Democrats’ bill, likely on Thursday.

Mcconnell noted her remarks on the Senate floor Monday afternoon.

“The only group left in Washington D.C. that are reportedly agonizing over whether to block a discussion of police reform or let it proceed seem to be our Senate Democratic colleagues,” he said.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck

Schumer continued to criticize the Republican measure, introduced by Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C.

He said the bill mostly reads “like a list of suggestion­s” to local and state police department­s and that it isn’t “genuine police reform.”

“This is not a time for studies, or commission­s, or tinkering around the edges,” he said.

Both the Democratic proposal and Scott’s legislatio­n would establish a federal database to track use-offorce incidents involving state and local police officers, and withhold some federal funds to those that don’t participat­e.

But they take different approaches to the use of chokeholds on suspects, no-knock warrants in drug cases and body cameras. And most notably, Scott’s bill is silent on “qualified immunity.”

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