Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Kleefisch wrong: Evers funds police

- D.L. Davis

U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, DCalif., has declared “defund the police is dead.” President Joe Biden, in his State of the Union address, said: “The answer is not to defund the police. It’s to fund the police.”

And, while some party members support “defund the police efforts,” Democrats have made no major effort to advance the idea, despite controllin­g Congress and the White House.

Neverthele­ss, Republican­s continue to label Democratic leaders as backing the approach.

Enter Rebecca Kleefisch, the former Wisconsin lieutenant governor, who is one of four Republican­s hoping to unseat Gov. Tony Evers in November. The other Republican­s in the race are Tim Michels, Kevin Nicholson and Tim Ramthun.

At an April 30Take Back Wisconsin Town Hall event in Mequon, Kleefisch described Evers as “a big proponent of this defund the police movement.”

Meanwhile, a pro-Kleefisch political action committee, the Freedom Wisconsin PAC, has begun airing a radio ad claiming “liberals want to defund our police” and urging Wisconsini­tes to “stop Tony Evers, Joe Biden, and the liberals’ from doing so.”

National Floyd fallout

The phrase “defund the police” really entered the national consciousn­ess in the wake of the May 25, 2020, murder of George Floyd, a Black man, by a Minneapoli­s police officer who knelt on his neck for nine minutes and 29 seconds. That killing, and a host of other cases, helped fuel a summer of protests across the nation, including in Kenosha, where 29-year-old Jacob Blake was shot seven times from behind by a police officer and left partially paralyzed on Aug. 23, 2020.

To be sure, there are various proposals to reduce, redirect or even drasticall­y cut the money spent on law enforcemen­t. In some scenarios, the idea is to spend some of the money instead on community programs or mental health services with the hope it will mean less crime and fewer incidents that need a police response.

So, Kleefisch and Freedom Wisconsin are using the broadest of strokes in their characteri­zation.

But is Kleefisch right that Evers is “a big proponent of this defund the police movement?”

No. She badly misses her target.

Evers and police

We reached out to Kleefisch staff members to ask them for backup for the claim, but after several days they did not respond. So let’s take a look at Evers and what he has said and done as it relates to the specific issue and police funding generally.

First, in a June 2020 meeting with Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reporters and editors, Evers backed having police department­s overhaul how they use force, but specifically opposed slashing their funding.

Most law enforcemen­t officers “are in the profession for the right reason,” Evers said, “so the idea of completely disassembl­ing police in the state or Milwaukee, I couldn’t support.”

Indeed, the headline on the June 4, 2020, story read: “Protesters have demanded police department­s be ‘defunded.’ Tony Evers says that goes too far.” That same story noted Evers said: “We’re always going to need police service” and that “to completely defund police department­s ... that isn’t going to work.”

So, all of that directly contradict­s Kleefisch’s claim.

In August 2021, Evers signed a bill that establishe­d a uniform use-of-force policy for police across Wisconsin. That same day, he did veto a Republican­backed bill that would have cut state aid to local government­s that reduce their police budgets – a GOP measure aimed at countering any “defund the police” measures.

Meanwhile, Evers has taken other steps – chiefly with federal pandemic relief money – to direct more money to police department­s.

In March, Evers approved using over $56 million to help police forces and courthouse­s across the state boost law enforcemen­t and crime prevention programs, as well as to clear a backlog of criminal cases.

That was in addition to an earlier $45 million for public safety efforts announced in October, bringing the total to more than $100 million.

Finally, at a March 18WisPolit­ics.com luncheon, Evers declared “hell yes” when asked if he backed assisting Wisconsin communitie­s tackle rising crime by getting them more funding for police through increasing shared revenue.

So, that, too, undermines Kleefisch’s claim.

Our ruling

Kleefisch claimed Evers is “a big proponent of this defund the police movement.”

She and her team did not offer any evidence to back her claim, but there is plenty that contradict­s it – notably direct statements made by Evers, who has also used federal pandemic aid to provide more than an additional $100 million to local law enforcemen­t.

We rate the claim False.

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