Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Crime will be a big issue in the midterms

- Paul Krugman Paul Krugman is a columnist for the New York Times.

Results from last week’s primaries in California suggest that crime may be a big issue in the midterm elections. In San Francisco, a progressiv­e prosecutor was ousted in a recall vote. In Los Angeles, a businessma­n and former Republican who has run for mayor on the promise to be a big crime fighter made a strong showing.

It’s not hard to see why crime has moved up on the political agenda. Murders surged nationwide in 2020 and ticked up further in 2021, although we don’t really know why. A likely explanatio­n is the stress caused by the pandemic — stress that, among other things, led to a large increase in domestic violence.

Despite the recent surge, the overall homicide rate is still well below its peak in 1991, and the geography of the political backlash doesn’t seem closely correlated with actual crime rates: San Francisco and Los Angeles both have less violent crime than, say, Houston.

But rising crime is real, and voter concern is understand­able.

But will the public backlash against crime lead to positive results? I wish I could be optimistic. At the very least, we’ll need to get past some widespread misconcept­ions. And even then, talking about cracking down on crime is easy; actually doing something about it isn’t.

First, we need to get past the idea that crime is mainly a bigcity problem. The idea is still very much out there, even though it has long since stopped being true. As Bloomberg’s Justin Fox recently documented, New York is remarkably safe, not just compared with other large U.S. cities but also compared with small towns and rural areas. In particular, New York City has a substantia­lly lower homicide rate than that of Ohio as a whole.

This doesn’t mean that everything is fine in the Big Apple; Eric Adams was elected mayor in part because crime has risen sharply, and he took a get-tough-on-crime stance. But in a rational world, politician­s from the heartland wouldn’t be sneering at New York. They’d be looking at our biggest city, which also happens to be one of the safest places in America, and trying to figure out what it’s doing right.

Another misconcept­ion we need to get past is the idea that rising crime is all about immigratio­n.

J.D. Vance, now the Republican nominee for senator from Ohio, in particular, has based his campaign largely on demagoguer­y about immigratio­n and especially about immigrant crime — demagoguer­y that seems to work best in places with very few immigrants: Less than 5% of Ohio’s population is foreignbor­n, compared with 38% in New York City.

Even if we can avoid the misconcept­ions, however, what can politician­s actually do about crime?

It would help if we knew what caused crime to fall so much between the early 1990s and the mid-2010s — a decline, by the way, that was accompanie­d every step of the way by Gallup polls showing a plurality, and usually a large majority, of Americans asserting that crime was rising. But my reading is that there’s no consensus on why that decline — which took place all across the nation, in red states and blue — took place.

It would also help if there were a clear pattern to the crime wave of 2020-21. But like the earlier decline, it was pretty much universal across America; it hit states and cities run by conservati­ve Republican­s, centrists and liberal Democrats with more or less equal force.

So complainin­g about crime is easy, but actually bringing it down is hard; in fact, New Yorkers already seem deeply disillusio­ned with Mr. Adams’ efforts.

One thing that might help is better policing. The available evidence suggests that severe sentences for convicted criminals don’t do much to deter crime but that an increased probabilit­y of being caught does. So “defund the police” was a stupid (and politicall­y destructiv­e) slogan; we probably need to devote more, not less, resources to law enforcemen­t.

But of course we also need police who do their job — the story from Uvalde, Texas, just keeps getting worse — and don’t abuse their position. If fear of crime is a real issue, so is minority groups’ fear of being abused by the people who are supposed to protect them, and we can’t simply trust police to always do the right thing.

Oh, and it would help matters if criminals weren’t equipped with military-grade weapons and body armor — and no, having everyone else heavily armed isn’t the answer.

New York doesn’t have low crime by American standards because it’s full of good guys with guns.

Anyway, like it or not, crime will be an issue in November. As I said, I wish I could be optimistic. But my fear is that the beneficiar­ies of the new focus on crime will be politician­s who have nothing to offer but tough talk.

 ?? Kevin Hagen/Associated Press ?? One of the reasons Eric Adams was elected mayor of New York was his get-tough-on-crime stance.
Kevin Hagen/Associated Press One of the reasons Eric Adams was elected mayor of New York was his get-tough-on-crime stance.

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