Exclusive: Most Americans, including Republicans, support sweeping
Democratic police reform proposals - Reuters/Ipsos poll
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[June 12, 2020]
By Chris Kahn
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Most Americans,
including a majority of President Donald Trump’s Republican Party,
support sweeping law enforcement reforms such as a ban on chokeholds and
racial profiling after the latest death of an African American while in
police custody, according to a Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll released on
Thursday.
The national survey on June 9-10, shows the public broadly on the side
of Democratic lawmakers, who proposed a series of changes to police
departments (https://www.reuters.com/
article/us-minneapolis-
police-congress/u-s-democrats-
pledge-transformative-change-with-police-reform-bill-idUSKBN23F2OI)
in the United States as protesters gathered nationwide to condemn the
death of George Floyd and racism.
The White House and Republican lawmakers are preparing their own plans
for changes in policing, though they are expected to fall short of the
deep reforms being sought by Democrats in Congress and Joe Biden, their
party's presumptive presidential nominee in the Nov. 3 election to
challenge Trump.
The poll (https://graphics.reuters.com/
USAELECTION/qmypmorxgpr/Topline%20Reuters%20George
%20Floyd%20Protests%20%20
Police%20Reform%2006%2010%202020.pdf)
conducted online of 1,113 U.S. adults showed bipartisan support for many
of the Democrats' proposals.
For example, 82% of Americans want to ban police from using chokeholds,
83% want to ban racial profiling, and 92% want federal police to be
required to wear body cameras.
It also found that 89% of Americans want to require police to give the
people they stop their name, badge number and reason for the stop, and
91% support allowing independent investigations of police departments
that show patterns of misconduct.
Seventy-five percent of Americans want to support "allowing victims of
police misconduct to sue police departments for damages."
Trump, who has been trying to win back suburban voters by positioning
himself as a "law-and-order" president, called on states to crack down
on the protests. Trump had previously said that he could use military
forces if states did not quell protests, which have been mostly peaceful
apart from some arson and looting and clashes with officers.
According to the Reuters/Ipsos poll, rank-and-file Republicans appear to
be mostly supportive of the proposals Democratic lawmakers in Congress
unveiled on June 8. [nL1N2DL0J4] The legislation followed Floyd's May 25
death in Minneapolis, where a police officer knelt on his neck for
nearly nine minutes.
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Demonstrators march from the U.S. Capitol Building during a protest
against racial inequality in the aftermath of the death in
Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd, in Washington, U.S.,
June 6, 2020. REUTERS/Erin Scott/File Photo - RC267H9MP0HO
According to the poll, six out 10 Republicans supported a provision
that would allow “victims of police misconduct to sue police
departments for damages.”
Seven in 10 Republicans support bans on racial profiling and
chokeholds. Nine in 10 Republicans agree that police should wear
body cameras and the same proportion agreed that law enforcement
agencies should be open to independent investigations.
Trump also has tried to tie Democrats to calls for "defunding the
police" by activists on the left. The term refers to eliminating or
cutting spending on police departments, often the largest expense
for municipalities, and using the funds for education, social
welfare, housing and other community needs.
Trump and Biden have both said they oppose "defunding" police
departments.
Yet the Reuters/Ipsos poll found that support varies based on how it
is defined.
For example, 39% of respondents supported proposals “to completely
dismantle police departments and give more financial support to
address homelessness, mental health, and domestic violence.”
But 76% said they supported moving “some money currently going to
police budgets into better officer training, local programs for
homelessness, mental health assistance, and domestic violence.”
Minneapolis is considering phasing out its police department but the
city council has not formally discussed how it would do so, and what
it would replace the department with.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll gathered responses online, in English, across
the United States. It gathered responses from 1,113 adults,
including 495 Democrats and 417 Republicans and has a credibility
interval, a measure of precision, of plus or minus 3 percentage
points.
(Reporting by Chris Kahn, Editing by Soyoung Kim and Grant McCool)
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