US lawmakers ‘making progress’ on police reform – but it’s still early stages
In the aftermath of Derek Chauvin being convicted of murdering George Floyd, it seems like there is momentum for the US Congress to pass some kind of police reform bill.
Hearings on policing have been held and point people on both the Democratic and Republican sides are in talks. By most metrics, Congress is in a comfortable position to pass some kind of bill meant to deter police brutality and prevent another George Floyd or Eric Garner.
But this is Congress in 2021. There have been plenty of moments where bipartisanship seemed high and failure seemed remote right before failure became certain. As a result, and despite the intense societal reckoning over racism playing out in America, there are few people who see the passing of meaningful new laws as a guaranteed outcome.
Yet people are talking. “I’m optimistic that we’re making progress. I’m confident that I’m going to negotiate with people at the table and no one else,” Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina said during a brief interview on Thursday.
Scott’s comments came on a day of movement among the principal lawmakers who will have to be involved in some kind of compromise bill’s passage. The New Jersey senator Cory Booker led a committee hearing on policing reform. The California congresswoman Karen Bass, who sponsored the ill-fated George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020, engaged in early discussions with Scott and other members of Congress.
Scott met Bass on Thursday and said those conversations went “well” but wouldn’t elaborate on specifics of a compromise bill.
Outside of Congress, high-profile lawmakers have called for passage of some kind of policing bill.
Joe Biden has publicly urged Congress to make another attempt at passing a policing reform bill.
“George Floyd was murdered almost a year ago,” the president said in remarks from the White House. “It shouldn’t take a whole year to get this done.”
Republicans argued that the Democratic bill put too much power and responsibility at the federal level. So Scott, after being appointed as the point person on crafting a policing reform bill by Mitch McConnell, pushed his own policing reform bill last year, only to have Senate Democrats filibuster it. Scott’s bill proposed to use federal grant money to incentivize police departments to use body cameras, along with strategies for de-escalating situations.
But by the end of last year, a policing reform bill looked like it would stay in the legislative graveyard. Republicans refused to sign on to Democrats’ policing bill and Democrats viewed the Republican counter-offer as a nonstarter.
In March, after Democrats took control of the House of Representatives, the chamber passed the George Floyd Policing Act. But since then, it’s faced opposition from Republicans in the Senate. The legislation bars law enforcement from engaging in racial profiling, prohibits chokeholds and noknock warrants. It also creates a national police misconduct registry.
But it’s too early to say whether this policing reform momentum is on the same trajectory as it was last year. Discussions, according to multiple congressional aides, are very much in the earliest stages.
The presence of Scott at the table is important.
“McConnell and the conference trust Scott, and on this issue especially because of his past work on it,” said a former Senate Republican leadership chief of staff. “If there’s going to be a bipartisan reform bill that actually comes together this year, the conference trusts him to come up with a compromise that the majority of them will be able to support.”
Scott has signaled areas of compromise, such as on qualified immunity, where responsibility would fall to police departments instead of individual officers.
Talks about sticking points aren’t in full swing yet. Congressional leaders are encouraging early bipartisan talks though. All lawmakers will say, though, is that early progress is being made.
“Look, I’ve encouraged Senator Booker to talk to Senator Scott and see if they can come up with something. They are making progress. I’m not going to get into the details of their discussions,” Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer said.
“But if we could come up with a strong bill that deals with this systemic bias that’s been in our police forces for far too long, that would be great.”