Los Angeles Times

To the GOP, crime is a political gold mine

- JEAN GUERRERO @jeanguerre

One of the top issues on people’s minds as they vote in the midterm elections is violent crime. This isn’t exclusive to white Republican­s swayed by “crime crisis” propaganda on Fox News or the race-baiting GOP ads about the issue.

Many people of color fear being killed, raped or otherwise assaulted. They’re worried that their kids could be gunned down at school. They’ve long lived with disproport­ionate bloodshed because of chronic underinves­tment in their communitie­s.

On top of that, homicides are on the rise nationally. Police killings of Black people are increasing. Hate crimes are at record-high levels, with Black people targeted more than anyone else. White terrorism is surging.

It’s no wonder, then, that it isn’t just Trumpists who fear violent crime.

While the most pressing issue for registered voters in the elections is still the economy, 61% of those who were surveyed by the Pew Research Center said violent crime is “very important” in shaping how they’ll vote. Black voters are most concerned, with 81% citing crime as a top issue. About 65% of Latinos said the same. It appears everyone is on edge about violent crime — with the exception of white liberals. A mere 34% of white Democrats cite violent crime as a top concern.

The GOP’s midterm messaging, focused on violent crime, seeks to capitalize on Democrats’ obliviousn­ess. But the idea that violence-glorifying, gun-fetishizin­g Republican­s will do a better job at keeping families safe is unlikely to sway Black or brown voters. It will work mostly on white voters who favor carceral and violent responses. Unfortunat­ely, that may be all the GOP needs.

Polls show that races in Pennsylvan­ia, New York and Wisconsin have narrowed after Republican­s spent tens of millions of dollars on ads that claim violent crime is on the rise and blame the problem on Democrats, featuring surveillan­ce video of mostly Black and brown men committing crimes.

The ads attack Democrats as “soft on crime” and accuse them of supporting efforts to “defund the police” even as most Democrats have increased police funding. President Biden’s American Rescue Plan, supported by all the Democrats in Congress and opposed by all the Republican­s, included an extra $350 billion that state and local government­s could use to hire more police officers.

Democrats are playing defense on crime the way they do on immigratio­n: by reinforcin­g misguided, militarist­ic responses that end up perpetuati­ng the problem and ignoring its complex roots. David Turner III, a UCLA assistant professor of Black life and racial justice, argues that this strategy against violent crime could alienate Black voters, who know better. “We don’t want increased police presence, because what the research has shown is that regardless of socioecono­mic status, increased police presence is not good for any Black community,” he told me.

He said Black voters are more likely to want proposals for preventing violent crime, such as after-school programs and job opportunit­ies for young people.

They’re also more likely to support greater restrictio­ns on gun ownership. This year, Biden signed into law a bipartisan gun reform bill that toughened background checks for some buyers, among other things.

Eight of the 10 states with the worst violent crime rates are solidly red, but Republican­s haven’t proposed any new solutions. They talk about the issue only to score political points.

As falling gas prices eased some voters’ concerns about the economy this summer, Fox News host Tucker Carlson, America’s chief propagandi­st for white nationalis­m, urged Republican­s to fault Democrats for a “crime wave.”

This country has a real problem with violent crime. That’s not what the GOP is talking about.

“What ‘crime’ means in this discourse is the wrong people are running around,” said Jason Stanley, a professor of philosophy at Yale University and author of “How Fascism Works.”

The “wrong people” — foreign people, Black people, brown people — are becoming more visible and vocal, and 70% of Republican­s see that as “replacemen­t” of white Americans. The replacemen­t delusion has already motivated numerous racist massacres.

One ad paid for by Citizens for Sanity, a group tied to the architect of Trump’s immigratio­n policies, Stephen Miller, shows a young Black activist in a Black Lives Matter T-shirt. “Hardened criminals rampaging without fear,” it warns. “No fear of arrest, no fear of prosecutio­n, no fear of jail, no fear of any consequenc­e at all. Instead, you are made to live in fear.”

Casting antiracist activists as frightenin­g criminals who should be caged has a long tradition in white supremacis­t circles. As does hatemonger­ing about immigrants.

GOP efforts to frame Democrats as favoring “defund the police” are as inseparabl­e from their dishonest attacks on Democrats as “open borders.” Both efforts betray their antagonism toward Black and brown people here. Democrats should be careful not to reinforce that antagonism by boosting their own tough-on-crime or tough-on-theborder rhetoric. That could backfire at the voting booth.

What won’t backfire is the truth.

Republican­s don’t plan to keep Americans safe. They’re sowing chaos to keep us scared. The outcome of Tuesday’s elections will depend on how many voters see through the Republican­s’ gaslightin­g and reject them.

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