Biden faces balancing act as activists call to 'defund the police'
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[June 09, 2020]
By Trevor Hunnicutt and Joseph Ax
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Democratic
presidential candidate Joe Biden said Monday he opposes "defunding the
police," declining to embrace a rallying cry that has gained support
among progressive activists and protesters demonstrating against police
brutality.
The growing calls to dismantle or reimagine U.S. police departments have
put pressure on Biden and other Democratic leaders, who favor policing
reforms but are wary of adopting a loaded phrase that some Democrats
fear could be a divisive election issue.
President Donald Trump and other Republicans have seized on the "defund
the police" slogan to suggest Democrats are bending to extremists at the
expense of public safety.
The term is being used by activists to propose eliminating or cutting
spending on police departments, often the largest expense for
municipalities, and instead funneling the money to programs for
education, social welfare, housing and other community needs.
Protests have roiled U.S. cities for more than two weeks since the death
of George Floyd, an unarmed black man, after a white Minneapolis police
officer kneeled on his neck for almost nine minutes.
Biden, the former vice president, met with Floyd's family in Houston for
more than an hour on Monday to offer his sympathies.

"I don't support defunding the police," Biden said afterwards in an
interview with CBS. "I support conditioning federal aid to police, based
on whether or not they meet certain basic standards of decency and
honorableness."
Biden had previously called for a $300 million investment in policing,
contingent on officers mirroring the diversity of their communities. In
a statement, his campaign said he supports funding for better training,
body cameras and community policing.
Trump on Monday said on Twitter that, "Radical Left Democrats want to
Defund and Abandon our Police" despite low crime rates. "Sorry, I want
LAW & ORDER!"
Biden and Trump will face off in the Nov. 3 election. At a law
enforcement roundtable on Monday, Trump also said he was looking at
various police reforms but vowed, "There won't be defunding."
Biden's stance echoed that of Democrats in Congress, who on Monday
unveiled sweeping legislation to combat police violence that stopped
short of cutting funding for local law enforcement agencies.
A 'NEW POLITICAL OPPORTUNITY' FOR REFORM
Progressives are pushing for more. Senator Bernie Sanders - who promised
to hold Biden accountable after ending a presidential campaign and
endorsing the former vice president - has called for slashing all
federal funding for police departments accused of violating people's
civil rights.
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U.S. Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe
Biden speaks during a campaign event about the U.S. economy at
Delaware State University in Dover, Delaware, U.S., June 5, 2020.
REUTERS/Jim Bourg

Several people serving on "unity" task forces set up by Biden and
Sanders support shifting funding from policing to community
services, they told Reuters in interviews.
"Everyone recognizes the centuries of systemic oppression and white
supremacy and the fundamental failure of the criminal justice
system," said Linn County, Iowa, Supervisor Stacey Walker, a member
of Biden's criminal justice policy task force though not speaking on
its behalf. "If that doesn't open up a new political opportunity for
sweeping reform, then I don't know what will."
Varshini Prakash, executive director of the environmental group
Sunrise Movement and a member of Biden's task force on climate
change, said it was less important for Biden to carry a "cardboard
sign saying 'Defund the Police'" and more important for him to
"articulate a real transformational vision...beyond policing and
incarceration."
Any cuts to police budgets are likely to be met with stiff
opposition from public sector unions, which finance and organize on
behalf of Democrats.
Bill Johnson, the head of the National Organization of Police
Associations, a nonprofit trade group, said Biden was right to
suggest more funding for both police as well as other services.
"Taking away police isn't going to solve these other problems,"
Johnson said.
Vanita Gupta, the former civil rights chief at the U.S. Department
of Justice and a member of Biden's criminal justice task force, said
the protests reflected a growing consensus that flawed policing is
just one aspect of a deeper issue.
"Police reform alone is not going to solve the problem of police
violence," she said. "It really is going to require fundamentally
looking at what kind of investments and priorities have been made in
black and brown communities over many years."

(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in New York and Joseph Ax in Dorset,
Vermont; Additional reporting by Steve Holland in Washington;
Editing by Colleen Jenkins, Alistair Bell and Cynthia Osterman)
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