The Columbus Dispatch

GOP attacks Dems’ police policy

Party crafts strategy to regain votes in cities

- Thomas Beaumont

DES MOINES, Iowa – When Minnesota Republican Tyler Kistner announced his candidacy for the U.S. House in April, he asked voters to ponder two questions: “What America will we leave for our children?” and “Will they be taught to hate their police?”

Across the Mississipp­i River in Wisconsin, Republican­s in the 3rd Congressio­nal District aired a digital ad this spring to demand that their Democratic congressma­n “stand up to attacks on law enforcemen­t.”

And in Iowa, a Republican governor who had promised additional checks on police conduct after George Floyd was killed by a Minneapoli­s police officer plans to sign a law making it harder for police to be sued on the job.

As rising murder rates gain attention in American cities, Republican­s have ramped up a misleading campaign to cast Democrats as anti-police and lax on public safety. It’s a message they believe helped them stave off greater Democratic gains in last year’s elections and one with renewed potency as cities consider cuts to department budgets as part of an effort to revamp policing.

It’s not at all clear that the GOP strategy, which stretches back to President Richard Nixon and was used by President Donald Trump, is a winning one. But it may be prominent as Republican­s search for ways to gain ground in suburban areas critical to winning control of the U.S. House next year.

A special election in New Mexico wasn’t a good sign for the strategy. GOP candidate Mark Moore used Albuquerqu­e’s rising crime and city officials’ decision to create an alternativ­e public safety department to hit Democrat Melanie Stansbury. But Stansbury won easily, with a larger share of the district’s votes than President Joe Biden garnered last year. Stansbury’s district is overwhelmi­ngly Democratic, making it an imperfect test case.

The National Republican Congressio­nal

Committee, the party’s House campaign arm, believes the issue will have a larger impact in swing districts, where the party plans to tie moderate Democratic incumbents to their more liberal colleagues who have supported the “defund the police” movement. That term is used to describe diverting money from police budgets to other social services, such as mental health support and drug addiction mitigation.

The GOP focus is on places such as Wisconsin’s 3rd Congressio­nal District, where 13-term Democratic incumbent Ron Kind is being cast as insufficiently supportive of law enforcemen­t, though he does not support defunding police department­s.

It also includes Democratic Rep. Angie Craig of Minnesota, who beat Kistner in 2020 and represents the Minneapoli­s and St. Paul suburbs where rioting broke out last year after Floyd’s death.

Since then, several cities have struggled with the police funding debate, while experienci­ng rising gun violence.

The NRCC chair, U.S. Rep. Tom Emmer of Minnesota, said he believes the message will resonate with voters because “crime is rising in America, yet Democrats still support the dangerous

idea of defunding the police.”

Neither half of the statement is fully accurate.

It’s true that violent crime has risen. The FBI’S National Incident-based Reporting System recorded 25% more homicides in 2020 than in 2019, and 12% more violent assaults. But the increase in homicides is nationwide, including in some cities that increased police spending and in some cities led by Republican­s.

Other crimes such as burglaries and drug offenses have decreased.

It also is not accurate to describe Democrats as uniformly supportive of “defund the police” efforts.

The Democratic-controlled House passed a sweeping police overhaul bill in March that did not include a provision to allow diverting money away from police department­s. Kind was one of only two Democrats to oppose the bill. He said it did not include sufficient protection­s for police. Craig voted for the measure.

The bill has stalled in the Senate, where Republican­s oppose it.

Like Emmer, U.S. House Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., tried to blame Democrats – in this case, Biden – for what Mccarthy claimed is widespread rising crime caused by cuts to police budgets.

In Iowa, Republican Gov. Kim Reynolds said last June while signing a bill banning chokeholds: “This is not the end of our work. It is just a beginning.”

A year later, Reynolds’ proposed racial profiling ban quietly died in the Gop-controlled Legislatur­e. Lawmakers passed a crime bill giving police greater protection from lawsuits and cracking down on protesters. Reynolds plans to sign the measure Thursday.

Republican­s in other states have made it harder for cities to cut police budgets. The Republican-led legislatur­e in Missouri made it easier this year for cities to be sued for approving deep cuts in police budgets. Similar laws were adopted in Florida, Georgia and Texas.

The change from a year ago reflects the general unpopulari­ty of cutting police spending, especially in pivotal suburban areas, North Carolina-based Republican pollster Paul Shumaker said.

A majority of Americans support progressiv­e criminal justice proposals such as programs to help people released from prison transition into society and changes in sentencing laws to allow probation or shorter prison sentences for some first-time conviction­s, according to a May poll from The Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

The poll also found that about 6 in 10 Americans oppose reducing funding for law enforcemen­t agencies.

The Democrats’ policing bill passed the U.S. House without a single GOP vote. It would ban chokeholds and end qualified immunity from lawsuits against police officers, while creating national policing standards in an effort to bolster accountabi­lity.

The bill does not back defunding police department­s, and Democrats didn’t even debate the idea, in part because swing-district representa­tives such as U.S. Rep. Abigail Spanberger, D-VA., who opposes defunding police, raised concerns about the political backlash.

“It’s always going to be difficult when a simple message is easy to gin up anxiety,” Spanberger said. “It becomes difficult to counter that. But it takes a lot of effort.”

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ/AP ?? Republican­s have ramped up misleading attacks casting Democrats as anti-police.
JULIO CORTEZ/AP Republican­s have ramped up misleading attacks casting Democrats as anti-police.

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