Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Biden does not support defunding police

- Laura Schulte

The funding of police forces across the country has made its way to center stage in the presidenti­al race after more than two months of protests over George Floyd’s death at the hands of officers in Minneapoli­s.

President Donald Trump’s campaign has started running an ad in Wisconsin that claims presumptiv­e Democratic nominee Joe Biden is “absolutely on board with defunding the police.”

The 30-second ad, posted to Youtube on July 20, shows an older woman, seemingly home alone, watching a news program that shows protests in Seattle and other cities. The voiceover claims that Seattle is planning to defund its police department by 50%, as well as remove some 911 dispatcher­s. Then, the voice of Sean Hannity of Fox News is heard:

“Joe Biden is absolutely on board with defunding the police.”

Immediatel­y following that, Biden’s voice can be heard saying: “Yes. Absolutely.”

Trump has also made the same charge against Biden over and over again.

A June 7 tweet stated that Biden and

Democrats want to defund police and another tweet made the same claim on July 17. He also repeated the claim during a July 19 interview with Chris Wallace on “Fox News Sunday.”

But repeating and repeating a falsehood does not make it true.

Biden is clear on police reform

While some argue police department­s

should be eliminated entirely, as PolitiFact National detailed in a June 9 article, the use of the phrase “defund the police” more typically means to revisit the functions of police department­s and shift funding toward, for instance, mental health and social services.

So, where does Biden land?

On June 9 he told “CBS Evening News” host Norah O’Donnell that he supports “conditioni­ng federal aid to police, based on whether or not they meet certain basic standards of decency and honorablen­ess.”

The following day, in an opinion piece that ran in USA TODAY, Biden said that abuse of power in police department­s must stop and that reform is the answer to problems, not defunding.

“While I do not believe federal dollars should go to police department­s violating people’s rights or turning to violence as the first resort, I do not support defunding police,” he wrote. “The better answer is to give police department­s the resources they need to implement meaningful reforms, and to condition other federal dollars on completing those reforms.”

He then goes on to explain a $300 million plan to reinvigora­te community policing in America, which would encourage relationsh­ip building between police officers and community members.

Biden’s campaign website says the $300 million would be used to set up grants that department­s across the country could apply for to hire more officers. In order to get a grant, the department­s would have to hire officers that reflect the racial diversity of the community they serve.

So, Trump flatly misreprese­nts Biden’s position.

Our ruling

A Trump campaign ad running in Wisconsin claimed that Biden “absolutely wants to defund police.”

But Biden himself has said several times in interviews and op-eds that he does not support defunding the police. And his campaign platform actually includes hiring more officers, focused on community policing.

We rate this claim False.

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