The Guardian (USA)

Barack Obama criticizes 'Defund the Police' slogan but faces backlash

- Kenya Evelyn in Baltimore

Barack Obama chastised Democratic political candidates for using “snappy” slogans like “defund the police” that he argued could turn voters away, in an interview released this week.

“You lost a big audience the minute you say it, which makes it a lot less likely that you’re actually going to get the changes you want done,” the former president told show host Peter Hamby in an interview with Good Luck America, a Snapchat political show.

“The key is deciding, do you want to actually get something done, or do you want to feel good among the people you already agree with?” Obama added.

However, Obama also defended the place of young progressiv­es as important “new blood” in the Democratic party, singling out Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez – who has spoken out strongly on the phrase and the essence of defunding police department­s to boost social spending.

Former Obama campaign operative Ben LaBolt shared part of the president’s interview with Hamby online on Tuesday before the full interview went live on Snapchat on Wednesday.

The remarks drew immediate backlash from notable, Black progressiv­e Democrats – including the Minnesota congresswo­man Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, who stressed “defund the police” was not about mere words but a “demand for equitable investment­s and budgets for communitie­s across the country”.

“We didn’t lose Breonna because of a ‘slogan’,” said Kentucky state representa­tive Charles Booker, referencin­g Breonna Taylor, the Black, Louisville woman who was shot dead in her own apartment by police in March during a botched raid.

Booker broke barriers in 2018 when he became the youngest Black lawmaker elected to the Kentucky state legislatur­e in nearly a century. And he ran a close contest for the Democratic nomination to challenge – ultimately unsuccessf­ully – the Republican Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell’s seat in the November election.

Cori Bush, who made history last month by becoming the first Black woman elected to represent Missouri in Congress shot back at Obama that “Defund the Police” was “not a slogan. It’s a mandate for keeping [Black] people alive.”

“With all due respect, Mr President – let’s talk about losing people,” she said. “We lost Michael Brown Jr. We lost Breonna Taylor. We’re losing our loved ones to police violence.”

The Black Lives Matter movement member’s rise in politics stemmed from her work as a community activist during protests against the shooting death of Mike Brown in Ferguson in 2014.

Bush is also the only candidate to formally run on a platform of defunding the police – a point many analysts say make criticism of the movement unwarrante­d.

Defund the Police has been a widely used phrase and policy initiative that gained traction over the summer as racial justice and anti-policing protests erupted in response to the killing of George Floyd by Minneapoli­s police in May.

As a policy initiative, defunding police department­s involves the reallocati­on of local and state resources away from law enforcemen­t into public services, designed to address issues of poverty, inequality and mental health – factors that contribute to crime.

The former president’s comments echoed other moderate Democrats who have taken issue and consider the phrase polarizing, prompting criticism of a progressiv­e movement led by what some have called radical messaging.

In South Carolina, where the Democratic base is largely composed of Black Americans who skew older and moderate, the Democratic incumbent Joe Cunningham lost his House seat to Republican Nancy Mace in the November election.

In the days following, the South Carolina congressma­n and House minority whip James Clyburn, who was regarded as instrument­al in turning around Joe Biden’s flagging campaign for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination when the moderate was behind leftist champion Bernie Sanders, told NBC News the slogan hurt some Democratic candidates.

“If you instead say ‘Let’s reform the police department so that everybody’s being treated fairly,’” Clyburn offered

alternativ­ely. “Not just in policing, but in sentencing, how can we divert young people from getting into crime?’”

While Obama took issue with progressiv­e slogans, he also criticized moderate leadership for failing to recognize the increasing­ly powerful influence of young, progressiv­es such as OcasioCort­ez.

The former president chastised the Democratic National Committee for only briefly featuring such democratic socialists in their opening montage during their national convention in Milwaukee in August.

“She speaks to a broad section of young people who are interested in what she has to say, even if they don’t agree with everything she says. You give her a platform,” he said, adding that across political ideologies “new blood is always good” for the party.

 ?? Photograph: CBS ?? Barack Obama: ‘The key is deciding, do you want to actually get something done, or do you want to feel good among the people you already agree with?’
Photograph: CBS Barack Obama: ‘The key is deciding, do you want to actually get something done, or do you want to feel good among the people you already agree with?’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States