Stamford Advocate

Prospects ever fainter for bipartisan policing overhaul deal in U.S. Senate

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WASHINGTON — Prospects seem increasing­ly faint for a bipartisan Senate deal on overhaulin­g policing practices as deadlocked lawmakers have fled the Capitol for August recess and political pressure for an accord eases with each passing week.

Bargainers insist they’re still talking and haven’t abandoned hope, though they’ve repeatedly blown past self-imposed deadlines. This spring, President Joe Biden pumped momentum into talks with a nationally televised address telling Congress to “get it done” by May 25, the anniversar­y of a Minneapoli­s police officer’s killing of George Floyd, a Black man.

That didn’t happen. Now, Washington’s focus is shifting to Biden’s drive to spend trillions on social, environmen­tal and public works programs, one of many budget showdowns that will clog Congress’ autumn calendar. With next year’s elections for House and Senate control edging closer, both parties are increasing­ly compelled to stock up on issues they can use against their rivals, weakening the political will for compromise.

“We all have to make sure we don’t lose this moment,” Ben Crump, an attorney representi­ng the families of Floyd and other Black victims of police shootings, said in an interview Thursday.

“Time right now is an enemy of a deal,” said James Pasco, executive director of the Fraternal Order of Police, the police union.

The slow fadeout from top-tier concern to background noise illustrate­s how contentiou­s issues sometimes die in Washington — not with clamorous showdown votes but a gradual realizatio­n that hey, people simply aren’t talking about this any more.

Former President Donald Trump’s frequent promises for highway and other infrastruc­ture projects and former President Barack Obama’s efforts to close the U.S. military prison for detained terrorism suspects at Guantanamo in Cuba both just ebbed away.

The Senate’s policing talks are aimed at writing compromise legislatio­n curbing law enforcemen­t agencies’ use of force and making them more accountabl­e for abuses.

For months, bargainers have been stymied over Democrats’ demands to make individual police officers accused of abuses liable for civil penalties. It’s currently difficult to pursue such actions in all but the most egregious cases. Republican­s and law enforcemen­t groups like the Fraternal Order of Police have resisted easing those limitation­s.

Negotiator­s are also divided over whether to ease the standards for bringing criminal cases against officers for excessive use of force.

“I had hoped that we’d be done by now, but we are still trading paper and making incrementa­l progress,” South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, the chief Republican negotiator, told reporters this week.

Scott, who in May set a “June or bust” goal that never materializ­ed, declined to say whether an agreement would be reached this year. He said ongoing violence like this month’s slaying of a Chicago police officer “has made this a more important process, in my opinion, and a longer process.”

Scott’s Democratic counterpar­t, New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, would say little.

“I’m just putting my head down and getting the work done as quickly as we can,” he told reporters recently.

As the Senate began a brief break in June, bargainers announced they’d reached a bipartisan “framework” for an agreement. They provided no detail and never produced evidence that their outline, whatever it was, was meaningful.

The Democratic-controlled House approved a sweeping measure in March that’s stalled in the evenly divided Senate. Last year, Democrats derailed a Senate GOP bill they said was too timid.

Police in the U.S. fatally shoot nearly 1,000 people annually, including a disproport­ionately high number of Black people, according to a database compiled by The Washington Post. Some slayings like Floyd’s have sparked nationwide protests, even as many communitie­s have revamped police procedures.

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