George Floyd bill misses anniversary deadline, but U.S. lawmakers say
prospects are good
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[May 26, 2021]
By Susan Cornwell and Trevor Hunnicutt
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. lawmakers
negotiating a police reform bill say they are optimistic about the
prospects for a bipartisan deal, despite missing a deadline set by
President Joe Biden of the one anniversary on Tuesday of the killing of
George Floyd.
Republicans and Democrats in Congress have in many ways become even more
divided in the year since Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, was killed in
Minneapolis by a white officer kneeling on his neck for more than nine
minutes.
Democrat Biden's plans to spend trillions on public works, funded by
taxes on the wealthy and companies, have been dismissed by Republicans,
and his COVID-19 relief package did not win a single Republican vote.
Democrats, who have named their bill after Floyd, suggested that won't
happen with police reform.
"We will get this bill on President Biden's desk," said Representative
Karen Bass of California, a Democrat leading House negotiations, at an
event with Floyd's family members in Washington. "We will work until we
get the job done. It will be passed in a bipartisan manner."
Democrats are seeking to restrict the use of chokeholds by police while
making it easier to hold officers liable in court.
Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina, a lead Republican negotiator, said
on Tuesday the main point of contention between the parties is qualified
immunity, a legal doctrine that shields individual police officers from
lawsuits in certain circumstances.
Still, he said, lawmakers are making progress.
"We have a long way to go still, but it's starting to take form," Scott
told reporters.
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Jerlano Bell of North Carolina holds up a George Floyd sign at the
"One Year, What's Changed?" rally hosted by the George Floyd
Memorial Foundation to commemorate the first anniversary of his
death, outside the Hennepin County Government Center in Minneapolis,
Minnesota, U.S. May 23, 2021. REUTERS/Nicholas Pfosi
Leaving out the ability to penalize cops in the courts has been
strongly encouraged by police unions, but would be a blow to law
enforcement reform activists. People briefed on the process said
that there was sufficient agreement on so many other reforms that
there should be scope for a compromise.
Last week, Biden signed a bill that won rare bipartisan support to
fight against hate crimes following a spate of attacks on Asian
Americans in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic.
At the White House on Tuesday, Biden met privately with Floyd's
family to discuss the bill named after him.
"We just want this George Floyd Policing Act to be passed," Floyd's
brother, Philonise, told reporters afterward. If the United States
can pass federal laws to protect bald eagles, "you can make federal
laws to protect people of color," he said.
(Editing by Heather Timmons and Sonya Hepinstall)
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