Imperial Valley Press

Resumed federal executions raise death penalty’s 2020 stakes

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The question to Michael Dukakis, the Democratic presidenti­al candidate in 1988, was brutally personal.

“If Kitty Dukakis were raped and murdered, would you favor an irrevocabl­e death penalty for the killer?” Bernard Shaw, a CNN anchor, asked, referring to the Massachuse­tts governor’s wife. Dukakis said he wouldn’t favor it because “I don’t see any evidence that it is a deterrent.”

The technocrat­ic, largely emotionles­s response in a debate mere weeks before the election marked the nadir of Democrats’ politicall­y agonized relationsh­ip to the death penalty — reinforcin­g in some voters’ minds that the party was soft on crime. President George H.W. Bush went on to crush Dukakis, winning the Electoral College vote, 426-111.

Four years later, then-Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton projected the opposite message, defending the death penalty on a New Hampshire debate stage, then leaving the campaign trail to return to his home state and preside over the execution of Ricky Ray Rector, a mentally impaired black inmate who killed a police officer and another man.

In the decade that followed, though, many Democrats began to rethink their positions on capital punishment, moved by startling revelation­s of innocent people being sentenced to death row only to be eventually exonerated and even worries about wrongful executions.

In 2014, an Oklahoma execution was problemati­c enough that President Barack Obama mulled a moratorium on the federal death penalty. Though that never materializ­ed, his party’s national platform endorsed one two years later, and only one of the 24 Democrats seeking the White House in 2020, Montana Gov. Steve Bullock, has publicly supported preserving capital punishment in some form.

The issue took on unexpected urgency on Thursday when the Justice Department announced that it will begin executing federal death row inmates for the first time since 2003, again raising the political stakes on a topic that’s rarely been a Democratic strength. And while the party is now much more unified in opposing it than a generation ago, the public is not, potentiall­y casting a long policy shadow over the upcoming primary.

Democratic strategist Mike Lavigne said that, despite the planned federal executions, he doesn’t see the issue as a winner for Democrats because “there’s not a lot of single-issue voters on the death penalty.”

Still, several Democratic presidenti­al candidates strongly criticized the move, setting up a stark contrast with President Donald Trump.

“Capital punishment is immoral and deeply flawed,” Sen. Kamala Harris of California said on Twitter. “Too many innocent people have been put to death.”

About 6 in 10 Americans favor the death penalty, according to the General Social Survey, conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago. That’s declined steadily since the 1990s, when nearly three-quarters were in favor.

Even California, the nation’s largest blue state, rejected a capital punishment ban in 2016. Now-Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom used an executive order to declare a moratorium, but prosecutor­s in the state still sometimes seek the death penalty.

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