The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

‘Stop the pain,’ brother of George Floyd tells Congress

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Philonise Floyd challenged Congress on Wednesday to “stop the pain” as lawmakers consider a sweeping law enforcemen­t overhaul, so his brother George won’t be just “another name” on a growing list of black Americans killed during interactio­ns with police.

Floyd’s appearance before a House hearing came a day after funeral services for George Floyd, the 46-yearold Minnesota man whose death has become a worldwide symbol in demonstrat­ions over calls for changes to police practices and an end to racial prejudices.

“I’m here today to ask you to make it stop. Stop the pain,” Philonise Floyd told the silenced hearing room.

Choking back tears, he said he wants to make sure that his brother, whom he called “Perry,” is “more than another face on a t-shirt. More than another name on a list that won’t stop growing.”

Floyd challenged lawmakers, “Be the leaders that this country, this world, needs. Do the right thing.”

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler gaveled in the session, many lawmakers and witnesses masked during the COVID-19 outbreak, as Democrats review the Justice in Policing Act, a far-ranging package of proposals amid a national debate on policing and racial inequity.

Lawmakers also heard testimony from civil rights and law enforcemen­t leaders as Congress considers the changes to police practices and accountabi­lity after Floyd’s death in police custody and the mass protests that followed.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi watched from the hearing audience, and the House GOP leader Kevin McCarthy also joined.

Republican­s are criticizin­g activists who want to “defund the police” — a catch-all term for re-imagining law enforcemen­t, but one that President Donald

Trump and his allies have seized on to portray Democrats as extreme as GOP lawmakers rush to come up with their own proposals.

“The American people understand that it’s time for a real discussion,” said Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, the ranking Republican on the panel. But he said what they also understand is that “it is pure insanity to defund the police.”

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