Daily Camera (Boulder)

State of the Union proposals tread familiar ground: police, guns, taxes

- By Matt Williams Matt Williams is the senior breaking news and internatio­nal editor at The Conversati­on. This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license.

President Joe Biden’s State of the Union speech lasted 70-odd minutes and was interrupte­d at least 70 times, mostly by standing ovations from supporters, but also from occasional interjecti­ons from less sympatheti­c lawmakers.

There was also policy to dissect in President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address. Some of it was new, much of it wasn’t — which meant that The Conversati­on was able to use its archives to shed light on and provide context and analysis to some of Biden’s proposals. Here are what scholars had to say on three policy themes that emerged.

1. Reforming the police

Biden may well have been planning to push for police reform in the State of the Union address before the recent release of footage showing police officers fatally beating Tyre Nichols. But that incident — the latest in a series of high-profile deaths of Black men at the hands of police — has again shined a light on the failure to address systemic problems in the nation’s policing.

In front of an audience that included Nichols’ mother and stepfather, the president called on Congress to “finish the job on police reform,” while referencin­g the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act — a bill that failed to pass into law amid gridlock in Congress.

The bill would have addressed some of the problems of U.S. policing. It includes a ban on racial profiling by all law enforcemen­t agencies and an end to the “qualified immunity” that protects officers in civil lawsuits. It would also expand the powers of the Justice Department to hold department­s to account over civil rights violations.

But, as Alexis Karteron, associate professor of law at Rutgers University — Newark, notes, it isn’t a sufficient fix. The problem is the federal government has only limited power when it comes to effecting change among the nearly 18,000 police department­s in the U.S.

“For those looking to the federal government to solve what’s wrong with policing in America, federal legislatio­n can’t ensure that every police department will make meaningful changes. That’s because the (George Floyd Justice in Policing Act) reflects the hard reality that the federal government has almost no control over state and local police department­s,” Karteron writes. She adds that even if it is passed, the likelihood is some of those agencies would sue, “arguing that the federal government is attempting to coerce them into adopting policy reforms they do not need or want.”

Which is why some policing experts, such as Thaddeus L. Johnson and Natasha N. Johnson at Georgia State University, have suggested that reform is best undertaken at a local level. That would leave the federal government to play “a clear role in regard to financing reform and addressing nonpolicin­g issues that contribute to crime, such as underlying poverty and the lack of green spaces.”

Federal money could also help police department­s recruit and train police officers. Biden in 2022, announced plans to add 100,000 officers nationwide as part of his policing plan. Research from criminolog­ists Ian T. Adams of the University of South Carolina, Justin Nix of the University of Nebraska Omaha, and University of Utah’s Scott M. Mourtgos suggests that adding officers would help reverse a trend that has seen many leave the profession since the protests that followed George Floyd’s death. In Memphis, where Tyre Nichols was killed, police staffing has dropped by nearly a quarter in recent years.

2. Tightening gun controls

The State of the Union comes just 38 days into the new year, but already there have been 60 mass shootings in the U.S., according to the nonprofit Gun Violence Archive. Brandon Tsay, who disarmed the gunman at the Jan. 21, 2023 deadly attack at Monterey Park, California, was among the attendees in Congress to hear Biden speak.

Biden detailed what his administra­tion was able to do to promote gun control, notably through provisions contained in the Safer Communitie­s Act. Hailed by Biden as “the most sweeping gun safety law in three decades,” the act was limited in scope, but experts believe its modest reforms will save lives.

Among other provisions, it gives support to states to pass so-called “red flag laws” that allow authoritie­s to seize the firearms of individual­s deemed to be a threat. Political scientist John A. Tures of Lagrange College has examined the effectiven­ess of red flag laws.

He found that states that passed such legislatio­n saw significan­tly lower firearm death rates than states without them.

“In 2020, if there were no red flag laws, I estimate that 52,530 Americans would have died in gun deaths. The number actually recorded was 45,222, indicating red flag laws saved 7,308 American lives that year,” Tures writes.

Lives — mainly female ones — will also be saved by the closing of the “boyfriend loophole,” which had allowed some people with a record of domestic violence to keep and buy firearms.

The Safer Communitie­s Act extended the wording in a federal ban to “those who have or have had a continuing relationsh­ip of a romantic or intimate nature.” April Zeoli at Michigan State University writes that closing the boyfriend loophole will save lives. But she notes in a separate article that recent court rulings may allow domestic abusers to keep their guns.

Meanwhile, Biden called for a ban on assault weapons “once and for all.”

Such a ban once existed but was allowed to lapse. But do bans on assault rifles work? Yes, writes Michael J. Klein of New York University, who was part of a team that analyzed the impact of the federal ban on assault rifles in place for a decade from 1994.

“We calculated that the risk of a person in the U.S. dying in a mass shooting was 70% lower during the period in which the assault weapons ban was active,” he writes.

3. Taxing the rich?

Biden came to the State of the Union armed with economic data showing robust job growth and evidence that once-soaring inflation is beginning to fall.

With the United States’ increasing national debt as a backdrop, Biden outlined a plan to boost government revenues through a minimum tax for billionair­es and a quadruplin­g of the tax on corporate stock buybacks.

Even if Republican­s in Congress were to approve the measures, it is unlikely to set a course for a new era of progressiv­e taxation. As Gabriel Zucman and Emmanuel Saez, economists at the University of California, Berkeley, explain, similar plans eyed by Democrats in recent years hardly amount to squeezing the uberrich; in fact, they do little to reverse the decadeslon­g trend toward regressive taxation, in which lower earners pay a larger percentage of their earnings in tax than wealthier ones.

The two economists conclude that although it would “increase taxes on millionair­es significan­tly,” the 2021 proposal put forward by Democrats would “largely leave billionair­es off the hook, despite the explosion of their wealth during the pandemic.”

 ?? YURI GRIPAS — ABACA PRESS/TNS ?? President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address provided plenty of policy proposals that are worth examining. During his 70-minute speech, the president touched on policing, gun violence and taxing America’s wealthiest.
YURI GRIPAS — ABACA PRESS/TNS President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address provided plenty of policy proposals that are worth examining. During his 70-minute speech, the president touched on policing, gun violence and taxing America’s wealthiest.

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