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- The dismissive

Preliminar­y data, however, suggest that, across major cities, homicides rose by an average of 30 percent last year—then jumped another 24 percent through the first few months of this one. If current estimates prove accurate, 2020 witnessed the largest single-year increase in homicides in U.S. history, and 2021 is on pace to see an even higher jump.

This poses a challenge for progressiv­es. Over the past decade, the American left has come to define itself in opposition to our nation’s criminal-justice system—to the length of its prison sentences, the inhumanity of its penitentia­ries, and the racism of its policing. Amid the nadir in violent crime (and the high tide of post-2008 budget austerity), reform gained traction. Drugs were decriminal­ized, prison population­s cut, progressiv­e prosecutor­s elected, mandatory-minimum sentencing rolled back, and killings by police in major cities marginally reduced. But in America, safety and compassion historical­ly have been deemed competing goods. In times of relative peace, we may acknowledg­e the humanity of criminal offenders and the presumed innocence of suspect classes. But once the enfranchis­ed’s sense of security is shaken, such niceties have often been suspended.

Thus, the present homicide surge threatens to erode the left’s fragile progress toward a justice system worthy of that name. Already, the Democratic Party is seeking greater distance from radical police reform. And since frightened electorate­s are often reactionar­y ones, the rising salience of crime imperils the entire progressiv­e project.

All this has led some progressiv­es to downplay the past year’s murder wave and attempt to stigmatize media coverage of it. In Twitter’s left corner, straightfo­rward reporting on the homicide surge routinely attracts vitriolic condemnati­on; Dan Froomkin, editor of the progressiv­e media watchdog Press Watch, recently denounced a Washington report on the homicide surge as “an astonishin­g piece of garbage.” Leftist commentato­r Adam Johnson, meanwhile, suggested that the public’s avowed concern with crime in opinion polls is molded almost entirely by “mediashape­d perception­s driven by panicked local news.” The artist and anti-racist activist Bree Newsome warned that the “white establishm­ent” was hyping “a nonexisten­t crime wave.” Alec Karakatsan­is, a prominent civil-rights attorney, preemptive­ly dismissed an expected increase in homicides this summer by arguing that “what constitute­s a ‘crime’ is determined by people in power who have a lot of money,” among other things.

In isolation, almost all of these media criticisms are defensible. America is not experienci­ng a “crime wave” (i.e., an acrossthe-board increase in all categories of crime) so much as a homicide surge in certain pockets of certain cities. A wide range of socially devastatin­g activities are not coded as criminal because powerful interests benefit from them. And yet, as these plausible, if overheated, denunciati­ons of homicide coverage proliferat­e on progressiv­e social media, they send one fundamenta­l meta-message: The left is complacent about a large increase in the already exceptiona­lly high rate of homicide victimizat­ion endured by the urban working class.

It’s both politicall­y and morally imperative for progressiv­es to disavow such complacenc­y. The threat that public alarm over crime will trigger a punitive turn in policy is real. But the best way for the left to counter that threat is not to downplay concerns about rising murder rates but to insist that such violence underscore­s the necessity of progressiv­e reform. That is not an easy argument to make in the U.S. But events at the municipal level—for example, the recent reelection of Philadelph­ia’s progressiv­e district attorney, Larry Krasner—suggest that it can be a winning one.

posture that many progressiv­es adopt toward coverage of violent crime is motivated by inarguable insights: Americans routinely overestima­te the prevalence of crime, a fact that is largely attributab­le to the media’s “if it bleeds, it leads” modus operandi. Despite the homicide surge of the past two years, America’s murder rate remains far lower than it was in the 1990s, and mainstream coverage does not always convey this fact. Even last year, the number of Americans killed by homicide (roughly 20,000) paled in comparison to those killed by more mundane, perenniall­y undercover­ed social ills such as tobacco products (estimated to be 480,000), air pollution (est. 100,000), and lack of health insurance (est. 45,000).

Given these realities—and the political hazards of crime’s rising salience—there might be a case for trying to bully news outlets into giving short shrift to a murder wave, were that a plausible objective. But it isn’t. No amount of Twitter dunks will persuade the mainstream media to abandon its preoccupat­ion with violence because none will extinguish our own fascinatio­n with the same. “Man Who Lived in Vicinity of CoalFired Power Plant Dies Prematurel­y From Respirator­y Problems” will never command as much attention as “Toddler Killed by Stray Bullet.”

If the left’s attempt to stigmatize media coverage of rising crime is tactically quixotic, it is also often intellectu­ally hypocritic­al.

Yes, America’s murder rate is lower today than it was in the early 1990s. But so is the percentage of Americans who lack health insurance. In 2018, progressiv­es did not lambaste the media for covering a modest increase in the uninsured rate because things were still better than they had been in 1998. Rather, we pointed to the negligible uninsured rates of other developed countries and declared the performanc­e of America’s health-care system a persistent scandal. If our nation’s uninsured rate should be judged by the standard of other wealthy countries, why shouldn’t its murder rate be judged by the same metric? To put the same point differentl­y: Police shootings in American cities were less prevalent in 2020 than they had been years earlier. Does any progressiv­e believe that fact had any bearing on whether George Floyd’s murder deserved widespread media coverage?

I am not aware of any leftists who argued in 2012 that the national media shouldn’t treat the Sandy Hook massacre as an event worthy of national attention or political response on the grounds that America’s homicide rate was near a historic low. In the grand scheme of public-health threats, highcasual­ty mass shootings are marginal phenomena, but progressiv­es by and large do not disdain coverage of them on that basis. To the contrary, in the context of such shootings, progressiv­es typically recognize that homicide degrades our collective life in a manner that other, more prevalent causes of death don’t; in periods when mass killings come in quick succession, we often tweet lamentatio­ns of our newfound sense of physical insecurity in public spaces and condemnati­ons of the complacent policymake­rs who have undermined our safety. (I know I’m not the only person who, at public gatherings, has experience­d intrusive thoughts of where I’d hide or what escape route I’d take should bullets start to fly.)

Yet there is no progressiv­e argument for why (relatively) rare episodes of mass violence in places frequented by the white middle class deserve media attention and political concern but a 30 percent increase in homicide concentrat­ed in low-income Black communitie­s does not. And of course, the trauma suffered by middle-class news junkies who opt in to witnessing mass shootings on social media is trivial compared with the trauma suffered by poor children whose every walk to school is shadowed by the threat of lethal violence.

It is surely true that crime’s growing prominence in opinion polls is driven primarily by “media-shaped perception­s” rather than

firsthand experience, since criminal victimizat­ion is concentrat­ed among a disadvanta­ged minority. But a recent Yahoo News– YouGov survey found that concern with crime was significan­tly higher among the demographi­c groups that suffer the highest rates of firsthand victimizat­ion. Asked whether they considered crime to be a “very big problem” in America today, 59 percent of Black voters said yes, while just 47 percent of white voters said the same. Similarly, while only 41 percent of voters earning more than $100,000 a year called crime a “very big” problem, that figure was 50 percent among those earning less than $50,000.

The urban working class’s acute concern with crime is further illuminate­d by a Gallup poll taken last summer in the immediate aftermath of the George Floyd protests. In it, only 19 percent of Black respondent­s said they wanted a reduced police presence in their neighborho­od—this despite the fact that, in a nearly simultaneo­us survey, more than 80 percent of Black voters said they lacked confidence in the police.

The American left is not going to remake public safety in U.S. cities without expanding its support among the urban working class. And publicly associatin­g progressiv­ism with complacenc­y about a rise in homicides seems antithetic­al to that project in at least two ways. For one, it risks conveying the impression that the left lacks confidence in its own vision for public safety—generally speaking, political movements do not seek to downplay social problems that they think their program will solve.

For another, it invites the suspicion that the (largely white, middle-class) progressiv­e movement’s interest in preserving the lives of disadvanta­ged Black people is highly contingent: Lose your son in a way we find ideologica­lly flattering and narrativel­y satisfying—at the hands of a cop or some other archetypal embodiment of white supremacy—and you will know our solidarity. Lose him to another disadvanta­ged kid in a tit-for-tat gang feud, and we’ll criticize the media for treating an uptick in deaths like his as a serious issue.

I do not think such impression­s would be accurate. The left’s (far from universal) impulse to downplay rising homicide is rooted in a well-founded fear that an increase in crime’s salience will yield a punitive turn in public policy, which would only exacerbate the hardships of the urban poor. But on social media, the gap between the left’s avowed interest in the victims of police violence and its interest in the far more numerous victims of street violence is vast. Reasonable, ideologica­lly unsettled observers could get the wrong idea and grow more sympatheti­c to the right’s beliefs.

Progressiv­es aren’t going to get the media to ignore crime for the sake of social justice. And we aren’t going to persuade the urban working class to disregard rising rates of homicide. Thus, our best bet for resisting a punitive turn in criminal-justice policy is to convince voters that our approach to public safety is more effective than the pro-carceral status quo.

Happily, the evidence that a progressiv­e anti-crime agenda would outperform America’s traditiona­l draconian one is quite strong. Contrary to the wishful speculatio­ns of some pundits, the past year’s spike in homicide is not attributab­le to the rise of progressiv­e prosecutor­s: Murder rates have risen no faster in cities with reformist district attorneys.

Meanwhile, criminolog­ical research suggests that long prison sentences do not deter crime and are actually counterpro­ductive for public safety. It also suggests that investment­s in preschool and summerjob programs lower disadvanta­ged young people’s susceptibi­lity to criminal activity. Community-based “violence interrupte­r” programs can preempt lethal violence. Raising wages for “low skill” workers can reduce recidivism, and thus pro-labor policies are anti-crime policies. And if the Medicaid expansion is any guide, increasing access to affordable health care in general—and to free drug treatment in particular—can deliver immediate reductions in both violent and property crimes.

There are obviously distinctio­ns between center-left, progressiv­e, and abolitioni­st public-safety agendas. Most notably, there is a genuine tension between minimizing homicide victimizat­ion and literally, immediatel­y

If the left’s attempt to stigmatize media coverage of rising crime is tactically quixotic, it is also intellectu­ally hypocritic­al.

defunding the police. The empirical literature demonstrat­ing that high police staffing levels reduce crime is robust. American cops are bad at solving murders, but they’re pretty good at sitting in parked cars. And all else being equal, people are less likely to commit a violent crime in a moment of passion if a police car is in their immediate vicinity. Even criminolog­ists who support reductions in policing, like Fordham law professor John Pfaff, do not deny this finding. If leftists wish to persuade the unconverte­d that they take public safety seriously, I don’t think they should deny it, either.

But just because police deter crime, it does not necessaril­y follow that it wouldn’t be cost effective, from a public-safety perspectiv­e, to reallocate police funding to other public goods. Cost-benefit analyses of police funding uniformly neglect to account for both the social costs of policing and the opportunit­y costs of investing in cops instead of other social needs.

Investing in policing may reduce rates of victimizat­ion, but it does so at a price not captured in any fiscal budget: the needless deaths caused by trigger-happy officers; young Black and Latino men’s routine experience of harassment, discrimina­tion, and/or nonlethal forms of police violence; and the physical and emotional toll of those experience­s. If police primarily deter crime through their mere presence (and the threat of legal consequenc­es it projects), then it is plausible that a different category of public servant could serve the same function at a lower social cost. As a team of scholars at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice noted, many so-called Business Improvemen­t Districts already successful­ly rely on unarmed security guards to deter criminal activity.

As for the opportunit­y cost: One recent study from researcher­s at Columbia and the University of Pennsylvan­ia suggested that American cities are underpolic­ed, as every additional dollar spent on policing yields $1.63 in savings from crime reduction. Yet a separate study published the same year found that each new dollar invested in drugtreatm­ent programs may produce nearly $4 worth of crime preemption.

Wherever a progressiv­e (or abolitioni­st) falls on the “defund” question, though, the moral and political imperative to evince concern for rising homicide remains the same. Those who suffer most from the dual oppression­s of abusive policing and concentrat­ed violence deserve both justice and safety. To deliver for that constituen­cy, the left must convince a broader public that those aren’t competing goods. When we downplay criminal violence, we sound unconvince­d.

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