The Denver Post

Democrats, ignore the crime wave at your own peril

- By Doug Friednash Columnist for The Denver Post

Democrats, reading the tea leaves from Tuesday’s election, would be wise to make public safety one of their highest priorities.

Many neighborho­ods have become unsafe and Americans want action.

Republican­s like Virginia’s new governor, Glenn Youngkin, have seized this issue. Youngkin ran a series of ads attacking Democrat Terry Mcauliffe’s stances on public safety before his unexpected win Tuesday. In the 2022 midterms, Republican­s will try to paint a collective national image that Democrats are soft on crime.

Here are the cold facts. America’s murder rate rose

30% in 2020, according to data published last month by the Centers for Disease Control. The conclusion was consistent with the FBI’S data released the prior month. This staggering increase was the largest singleyear increase in more than a century, and possibly ever. Overall, the FBI data showed that violent crime has risen by 5.6%.

Colorado data released by the Colorado Bureau of Investigat­ions earlier this year showed Colorado having a 29% increase in homicides, 6.5% increase in violent crime, and an 18% increase in aggravated assaults.

Locally, a month-long investigat­ion by Shaun Boyd and

CBS4 that aired this past week found thousands of defendants in felony cases were released within days or hours of their arrest without paying any bond with many of these defendants being re-arrested later for worse crimes. The investigat­ion showed Denver County Court judges requiring no bond, or $1 bonds to people accused of violent crimes with long criminal histories.

Denver Police Chief Paul Pazan thought outside of the box and formed a partnershi­p with federal agents so that some of the cases could be heard in federal courts instead.

Advocating for defunding the police, significan­tly reducing their budgets, or reallocati­ng resources of police department­s away from critical public safety needs, is a recipe for political disaster.

Successful mayoral candidates across the country, like Democrat Eric Adams, who is New York’s new mayor and a former New York police captain, made investing in the police and fighting crime an essential part of his campaign.

A Pew Research Center study released last week shows the public’s attitudes shifting on police funding. The percentage of adults who say spending on policing in their area should be increased now stands at 47%, a 16 percentage point increase from June 2020.

In Pew’s July survey, 61% of adults said violent crime was a very big problem, an increase from 48% in April. The July survey showed that Americans were more concerned about violent crime than the federal budget, climate change, economic inequality and illegal immigratio­n.

Colorado has shown that police reform and public safety investment­s are not a zero-sum Colorado should be proud of the landmark police accountabi­lity legislatio­n they passed in the wake of George Floyd’s murder and the other measures they are taking to provide a helping hand where needed. Colorado is one of the very few states to meaningful­ly address this issue.

But it’s also time to make significan­t investment­s in public safety.

Gov. Jared Polis deserves credit for his budget proposal, which seeks to invest $113 million in a public safety program aimed at reducing crime. The proposal included public safety workforce transforma­tions including access to mental health services, community public safety investment­s, domestic violence initiative­s, behavioral health investment­s, and millions in recidivism reduction initiative­s.

Many police department­s across the country need more resources to address staffing shortages, improve training and make important community investment­s.

Democrats should also advocate for appropriat­e bail and bond policies and yes, properly punishing violent criminals and repeat offenders too

Democrats who ignore this issue, do so at their own political peril.

Doug Friednash is a Denver native, a partner with the law firm Brownstein Hyatt Farber and Schreck, and the former chief of staff for Gov. John Hickenloop­er.

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