Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Defund the police’ a political dud, but now what?

At least the debate has allowed more voices to be heard on a vital issue

- CLARENCE PAGE Contact Clarence Page at cpage@chicagotri­bune.com.

RECENT elections show “Defund the police” to be what I expected all along: a slogan better suited for the streets than the ballot box.

That’s just as well. Giving the boot to “Defund the police” — a motto that, like the even more radical “Abolish the police” slogan, came out of last year’s “summer of reckoning” — should open a path to more thoughtful, workable and desirable ideas that won’t leave communitie­s feeling defenseles­s.

In Minneapoli­s, for example, voters rejected a measure that would have replaced the city’s police department with a Department of Public Safety. That initiative would have taken a “comprehens­ive public health approach” to law enforcemen­t. Licensed peace officers would have been relied on only “if necessary.”

In Seattle, moderate candidates backed by the city’s downtown business community won nonpartisa­n races for mayor, city attorney and a key council race over liberal candidates who had called to defund the police.

In New York, retired police captain Eric Adams beat further-left opponents in the liberal city’s mayor’s race despite his refusal to toe the progressiv­e line on a variety of issues.

In Buffalo, incumbent Mayor Byron Brown pulled off an unpreceden­ted write-in campaign victory to keep his seat after losing the Democratic primary to socialist India Walton, who had been backed by such noted Democrats as Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-cortez and Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand.

Although there is no election in violence-plagued Chicago, Mayor Lori Lightfoot offered timely reassuranc­e to new police graduates and newly promoted officers last month. She will “never yield” to the “defund” voices, she said, because the folks police Superinten­dent David Brown calls the “silent majority” overwhelmi­ngly want more and better police protection.

Chicago is hardly alone in that sentiment. Nationwide, the share of adults who say spending on policing in their area should be increased grew to 47 percent last month from 31 percent in June 2020, according to the Pew Research Center.

Pew noted that includes 21 percent who say funding for their local police should be increased “a lot,” up from 11 percent who said so last summer.

By race and ethnicity, white (49 percent) and Hispanic (46 percent) adults were more likely than Black (38 percent) and Asian (37 percent) adults to say spending should be increased.

In short, American voters still tend to gravitate to the center in general elections, even if they swing to left or right extremes in the primaries. On an issue as complex as policing, slogans such as “Law and order” on the right or “Defund the police” on the left are too simplistic to provide the magic pill we all wish we had to solve all of our crime problems. We have to keep looking.

At least, I’m grateful to see how much this issue has brought out voices that have been heard too little in the crime debate. I’m talking about Black and Hispanic voters and leaders from neighborho­ods who want more — and better — policing because their neighborho­ods are plagued with the highest crime rates.

And we also need to take a closer look at what we ask police to do. Brown, who also happens to be African American, has said in the past that “we’re asking cops to do too much in this country. Not enough mental health funding, let the cops handle it.”

He was referring to “every social failure” — from mental health funding to rounding up loose dogs. “Policing was never meant to solve all those problems,” he said. We have seen that with the mishandlin­g of mental health cases and others for which police, no matter how dedicated they may be, are not the best trained or equipped to handle.

He’s right. That’s why an apparently growing number of cities and towns are finding ways to reorganize their services to provide specialize­d EMTS or social workers where appropriat­e.

Unfortunat­ely, the furor surroundin­g the “Defund the police” slogan overwhelme­d the positive ways defunding has been applied in cities such as Camden, New Jersey, which has spent years bringing its crime rate down after a complete overhaul, not by abolishing police but by turning over many functions to the county.

Complicate­d remedies like that don’t always make the best politics in political campaigns. But when they work, they’re worth it.

 ?? The Associated Press file ??
The Associated Press file
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