Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ GOP senators set a summer deadline on Congress’ police reform bill.

GOP senators say bipartisan deal needs to be reached in June

- By Alan Fram The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Congressio­nal bargainers should reach a bipartisan deal on revamping policing procedures by early summer or abandon the effort, Republican­s said Wednesday, a day after George Floyd’s family used visits to the White House and the Capitol to prod lawmakers to act.

“I think it’s June or bust,” lead GOP bargainer Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina told reporters, the day after the anniversar­y of Floyd’s slaying at the hands of Minneapoli­s police. “We’ve got three weeks in June to get this done.”

“I think if it’s going to happen, it’ll happen before the July break,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, Scott’s fellow South Carolina Republican and another negotiator.

Neither senator explained why they had targeted the next few weeks as pivotal in talks that became serious in April but have produced no tangible product. But historical­ly, it gets harder for Congress to resolve controvers­ial issues as an election year approaches.

The Democratic-run House approved legislatio­n in March exposing individual police officers to civil suits, banning chokeholds and establishi­ng a national registry of misconduct by officers, but the measure has stalled in the Senate.

Aides to the top two Democratic bargainers, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey and California Rep. Karen Bass, did not immediatel­y provide comments about the Republican­s’ remarks.

Momentum for action surged last month after former Minneapoli­s officer Derek Chauvin was convicted in Floyd’s killing and President Joe Biden used a nationally televised address to urge action on legislatio­n by the anniversar­y of Floyd’s death.

Floyd’s relatives spent Tuesday afternoon with Biden and visited members of Congress, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif.

Both sides’ bargainers have consistent­ly expressed optimism about reaching a deal, with Scott saying Wednesday, “We’re doing our best. We’re making progress.”

Yet the talks have been a slog with the key dispute over qualified immunity, a legal doctrine that usually protects individual officers from lawsuits.

Democrats have wanted to eliminate that shield, while Republican­s want to retain immunity for officers but allow police agencies to be liable.

Opposing interest groups underscore­d those difference­s in interviews Wednesday.

The Senate begins a recess after this week and returns June 7, while the full House is gone until June 14.

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