Los Angeles Times

GOP policing bill blocked

Senate Democrats, calling it inadequate, deny the 60 votes the GOP needed to move the measure along.

- BY SARAH D. WIRE

Senate Democrats, calling it inadequate, deny the votes needed to advance the reform measure.

WASHINGTON — Democrats on Wednesday denied Republican­s the votes needed to advance the Senate GOP’s policing reform bill, casting doubt on the future of the effort as thousands of people continue to protest over the death of George Floyd, as well as police misconduct and excessive use of force.

Sixty votes were needed to bring the GOP-backed Justice Act, sponsored by Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.), up for considerat­ion. The chamber’s 53 Republican­s needed support from at least seven Democrats to proceed.

Democratic Sens. Doug Jones of Alabama and Joe Manchin III of West Virginia and independen­t Sen. Angus King of Maine voted with Republican­s, but it wasn’t enough. The bill stalled with a vote of 55 to 45.

Democrats have derided the GOP bill, which focuses heavily on data collection and urging department­s to change standards on when force is acceptable, as a watered-down version of their own proposal, with Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) saying Wednesday that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell “wants to show he’s doing something, and get nothing done.”

“So much of the anger in the country right now is directed at the lack of accountabi­lity for police officers who violate Americans’ rights,” Schumer said. “As far as I can tell, the Republican bill does not even attempt one significan­t reform — not one — to bring more accountabi­lity to police officers who are guilty of misconduct.”

A Minneapoli­s police officer has been charged with murdering Floyd, an unarmed, handcuffed Black man, by kneeling on his neck for more than eight minutes.

Video of Floyd pleading with the officer to move has spurred a national demand for police reform and accountabi­lity that has Congress racing to pass legislatio­n.

Sen. Kamala Harris (DCalif.) praised her Democratic colleagues for blocking a bill that she said didn’t include “substantiv­e solutions.”

“I want to thank all of our colleagues for their work today, which is to not fall into a political trap, to not take crumbs on the table when there is a hunger that America has for real solutions to a very real problem,” Harris said.

Republican­s have said their bill and the Democrats’ proposal are very similar, and argue that Democrats are foregoing progress by not approving the GOP bill.

Democrats argue the bills aren’t as similar as Republican­s say.

“Why wouldn’t you take the 80% now, see if you can win the election, and add on the other 20%? You’ve got to be kidding me,” Scott said after the vote.

McConnell (R-Ky.) had offered to allow senators to offer whatever amendments they wanted, and questioned why Democrats didn’t try to modify the bill rather than halt it.

“Nobody thought the first offer from the Republican side was going to be the final product that traveled out of the Senate,” McConnell said. “What’s supposed to happen in this body is that we vote or agree to get onto a bill. And then we discuss, debate and amend it until at least 60 senators are satisfied, or it goes nowhere.”

Schumer and the Senate sponsors of a Democratic bill, Harris and Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), said too many changes were needed. They said bipartisan negotiatio­ns are needed before a bill comes to the Senate floor.

“There should be bipartisan discussion­s with the object of coming together around a constructi­ve starting point for police reform,” Schumer said before the vote.

The Senate’s next steps aren’t clear.

The House is scheduled to vote on the Democrats’ version of a policing reform bill Thursday, a sweeping measure that would make it easier to prosecute officers criminally and file civil lawsuits for misconduct.

Schumer said the Senate bill’s failure Wednesday may open the door to new negotiatio­ns.

“I believe that the Republican Party sees the handwritin­g on the wall. They see what the American people feel, and they know now that while the House is going to succeed in passing a bill, the Senate won’t, and that falls on McConnell’s shoulders. He’s the Senate leader. He knows how to pass the bill. He set up something here so it wouldn’t pass,” Schumer said.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) questioned whether Congress was missing its moment to get something done on police reform.

“If we can’t do it now, I don’t know when we’ll ever do it,” he said.

He said the same disagreeme­nts with the bill would exist if it were brought before the Judiciary Committee before McConnell brought it to the Senate, as Democrats have requested.

“It’s not a process as much as it is a political calculatio­n that they don’t want to engage on this issue until after the election,” Graham said.

The Senate vote came shortly after the Senate approved the 200th judge nominated by President Trump: Mississipp­i Appeals Court Judge Cory T. Wilson, to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, serving Texas, Louisiana and Mississipp­i.

“Following number 200, when we depart this chamber today, there will not be a single circuit court vacancy anywhere in the nation for the first time in at least 40 years,” McConnell said.

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? PROTESTERS rally May 30 in Minneapoli­s after the killing of George Floyd, which sparked widespread protests against police brutality.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times PROTESTERS rally May 30 in Minneapoli­s after the killing of George Floyd, which sparked widespread protests against police brutality.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States