The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Dems see peril in replacing Minneapoli­s police

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As activists mobilized this summer to ask Minneapoli­s voters to replace their police department, one of the first prominent Democrats to slam the plan was a moderate congresswo­man who doesn’t even live in the city.

Angie Craig declared it “shortsight­ed, misguided and likely to harm the very communitie­s that it seeks to protect.” She warned that it could push out the city’s popular Black police chief.

Craig’s district covers a suburban-to-rural and politicall­y divided region south of the city, but her willingnes­s to jump into the fight next door highlights the political threat that Democrats like Craig see in the proposal.

As a city that has become synonymous with police abuse wrestles with police reform, the effort is sharply dividing Democrats along ideologica­l lines. The state’s best known progressiv­es — U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar and Attorney General Keith Ellison — support the plan, which would replace the police department with a new Department of Public Safety. Other top Democrats, including Sen. Amy Klobuchar and Gov. Tim Walz, oppose it.

The debate is dominating the city’s mayoral and City Council races, the first since a Minneapoli­s police officer killed George Floyd in May 2020 and sparked a global racial reckoning. Passing the amendment would be a major win for the reform movement — both in substance and symbolism. But many in the Democratic establishm­ent believe calls to “dismantle” or “defund” police cost the party seats in statehouse­s and Congress last year. They’re determined not to let that happen again next year. Defeating the Minneapoli­s measure has become a critical, high-profile test.

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