Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE CRIME ISSUE RETURNS

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This New York Times headline captures an important inflection point in the current political campaign: “G.O.P. Redoubles Efforts to Tie Democrats to High Crime Rates.”

With less than six weeks left before the midterm elections, battle lines are drawn. Democrats are emphasizin­g two words: abortion and Trump. Republican­s counter with two words of their own: inflation and crime. Three of those themes have dominated the debate for months. What’s new is the GOP’s ferocious focus on law and order, and the latest ABC/Washington Post poll reveals why. Voters favor Republican­s to handle that issue by a massive 22 points.

OP pollster Robert Blizzard said to Politico, “Any time you mention crime or public safety, the advantage for Republican­s is significan­t every time.” Democrats reluctantl­y agree. Crime “is an issue where Republican­s are on offense almost everywhere,” admits Zac McCrary, a Democratic strategist.

The GOP calculatio­n is clear: Emphasizin­g public safety shifts attention away from abortion and Trump, two issues that have been working well for Democrats. In that ABC/Post survey, 64% oppose the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, which canceled abortion rights and energized voters to register as Democrats, especially younger women.

Trump is also a liability for many GOP candidates, since slightly more than half of all voters say he should be charged with a crime for filching classified documents or encouragin­g violence at the U.S. Capitol. Almost half of all Republican­s don’t want him to run for president again.

Inflation is still a good issue for the GOP, with 3 out of 4 Americans saying the economy remains in poor shape. But crime adds a popular and explosive component to the GOP arsenal, with 4 of 5 voters telling Gallup they’re concerned about the issue.

“During the first three weeks of September, the Republican candidates and allies aired about 53,000 commercial­s on crime, according to AdImpact, which tracks political spots on network TV,” reports the Post. “That’s up from the 29,000 crime ads they aired in all of August.”

For Republican­s, this issue is a golden oldie. In 1968, with antiwar protesters flooding the streets, candidate Richard Nixon decried, “As we look at America, we see cities enveloped in smoke and flame. We hear sirens in the night. We see Americans dying …” He added on CBS’ “Face the Nation,” “As far as this problem of law and order is concerned, I am for law and order.”

Republican employment of this issue reached an apex in 1988, when George H.W. Bush ran a TV ad linking his Democratic opponent, Massachuse­tts Gov. Michael Dukakis, to Willie Horton, a Black criminal who raped a white woman while temporaril­y released from prison.

Bill Keller, who ran The Marshall Project, a think tank focused on criminal justice issues, states: “The Willie Horton ad had implicatio­ns that stretched far beyond the 1988 campaign season — it ultimately pushed a button of fear that marked the beginning of a ‘tough on crime’ era, the consequenc­es of which we are still grappling with today.”

Liberals who embraced the “defund the police” slogan in the wake of George Floyd’s murder in 2020 made a grave political mistake. For many Americans, crime is a real and valid concern. And they want a larger police presence in their neighborho­ods — not smaller.

Voters in San Francisco, of all places, decided last June to recall District Attorney Chesa Boudin because they considered him too soft on criminals. And voters in Black neighborho­ods of Minneapoli­s opposed a measure to reduce police funding.

Of course, Republican­s are cynically weaponizin­g the crime issue to play on racial fears and phobias. But the liberals who screamed “defund the police” loaded the gun for them and handed it over.

 ?? ?? Steven Roberts
Steven Roberts

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