Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Mayor Johnson says city ‘never defunded the police’

- Ricardo Torres

Republican U.S. Senate candidate Eric Hovde is criticizin­g large cities for how much they are spending on law enforcemen­t.

As in, not spending enough. Hovde tweeted out a clip of an interview on the Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show podcast on Feb. 25, 2024 where he mentioned conversati­ons he had with Milwaukee voters and criticized the movement to “defund the police,” calling it the “dumbest idea of the last 100 years.”

Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson responded to Hovde on X, saying Milwaukee “never defunded the police.”

In his tweet, Johnson included a page of the 2023 proposed budget for the Milwaukee Police Department showing an increase in funding from the $280 million adopted in 2022, to more than $300 million.

That’s a piece of evidence, but is it the full picture?

Funding for police in previous budgets

We reached out to Johnson’s office for backup, and spokesman Jeff Fleming responded by using the Wikipedia definition of the phrase “defund the police,” which describes it as “removing funds

Funding police Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson,

Democrat

The statement

In Milwaukee, we “never defunded the police.”

The verdict

City has continued to fund police through multiple budgets. However Johnson does not mention reduction in recent years of officers because of across-the-board cuts.

from police department­s and reallocati­ng them to non-policing forms of public safety and community support, such as social services, youth services, housing, education, healthcare and other community resources.”

Previous fact-checks have described “defund the police” as a movement to reduce funding to law enforcemen­t and invest in community services such as social services, youth services and public housing.

Fleming said any reduction to the police department’s funding in the past was a result of “across the board cuts” or “transfer of significant numbers of employees out of MPD to the new Department of Emergency Communicat­ions. No money has been taken from the police and reallocate­d for other non-policing forms of public safety.”

In previous budgets, positions within the police department also were eliminated through attrition.

Fleming also shared a chart from the city’s budget office showing funding for police at the highest levels since 2018 – at $304 million in the adopted budget for 2024. We went back to each year mentioned in the chart and verified its accuracy.

The lowest amount of funding the department received during that time was in 2022 when it received $280 million.

Further, in 2020, several aldermen pushed the city to explore a 10% cut in the police budget for 2021, but no such budget amendments were proposed or voted on.

That’s not to say police haven’t been negatively impacted by Milwaukee city budgets.

The 2021 budget cut 120 police positions under then-Mayor Tom Barrett. Johnson, as Common Council president, was among those who voted in favor of the budget.

In addition, Johnson’s tweet does not mention the number of sworn officers has decreased in Milwaukee from 1,864 in 2019, despite spending more on police.

In this year’s budget, the Police Department’s average sworn strength would increase to about 1,645. The increase is a product of a requiremen­t in a 2023 state law that boosted funding for local government­s across the state but also required Milwaukee to increase police sworn strength.

The city is spending more on police in this current budget, at $304 million, than any other department. And that was the case 15 years ago when the city was spending $230 million on police.

The total 2024 City of Milwaukee budget is $1.92 billion.

Our ruling

When responding to a claim about Democrats defunding the police, Johnson said Milwaukee “never defunded the police.”

The city of Milwaukee has continued to fund the police department through multiple budgets and for years no department has gotten more funding than police.

However Johnson does not mention the reduction in recent years of sworn police officers because of across-theboard cuts.

Our definition of Mostly True is a statement that is accurate but needs clarification or additional informatio­n. That fits here.

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