Ahead of U.S. midterms, Democrats struggle to find footing on violent
crime
Send a link to a friend
[June 03, 2022]
By James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Fed-up Democrats in
San Francisco and Los Angeles, liberal-leaning California cities reeling
from COVID-era spikes in homicides and gun violence, may punish their
own party at the polls next week over its criminal justice policies.
San Francisco's progressive district attorney, Chesa Boudin, is likely
to be pushed out of office in a recall vote, while voters in Los Angeles
will be choosing a new mayor – with an ex-Republican as a leading
candidate.
The results could send a blinking-red warning to Democrats ahead of
November's midterm elections.
In congressional and local races across the United States, Republicans
have seized upon calls by progressives to reduce police department
budgets and other liberal criminal justice policies to paint almost all
Democratic candidates as lenient on crime.
Democrats have struggled to formulate a persuasive rebuttal, even as a
new wave of moderates, such as New York Mayor Eric Adams, has urged them
to take a more tough-on-crime approach.
In April, the pollster Gallup found concern over crime was at its
highest level since 2016, with 53% of Americans saying they worried "a
great deal" about it. An ABC/Washington Post poll in May showed
Americans trusted the Republican Party over Democrats to handle crime by
12 percentage points.
But focus groups also show Americans increasingly worried about the
proliferation of firearms. That is an issue that Democratic consultants
said the party's candidates could hone in on, shoring up their support
with suburban and Black voters by explicitly tying lax gun laws to
surges in crime.
"It is absolutely something Democrats can and should be using to combat
against the increasing narrative of their being soft on crime," said
Angela Kuefler, a strategist who advises Democratic candidates on gun
issues.
Kuefler noted there is widespread public support for enhanced background
checks of gun purchasers and actions to decrease the flow of illegal
guns into cities.
A series of mass shootings - including last week's at an elementary
school in Uvalde, Texas, which left 19 children and two teachers dead -
has reignited the U.S. debate over policing and guns.
President Joe Biden has tried to balance a push for changes in policing
from the more radical wing of his party with voters' concerns about
security. An executive order last week, for instance, established
guidelines for the use of deadly force by federal law enforcement
officers.
Boudin, on the other hand, embraced a strong progressive agenda in San
Francisco - and appears to be paying the price.
COVID CHAOS
Boudin was elected in San Francisco in 2019 after pledging a series of
reforms, saying he would not try juveniles as adults, would not push for
sentencing enhancements for certain crimes that can add years to prison
sentences, and would not seek cash bail for any defendant.
He largely followed through on his promises, which also included
diverting low-level offenders away from incarceration to reduce the
city's jail population.
[to top of second column]
|
The window of a vehicle with the "Ghetto Life" motorcycle club sits
shattered with a bullet hole, at the scene of a shooting where two
people were shot dead and five wounded according to local media
reports on Sunday, in the Willowbrook community of Los Angeles,
California, U.S., April 11, 2022. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File
Photo
But after the pandemic began, the city saw increases
in homicides, gun violence and property crime. Hate crimes against
Asian Americans rose. Videos of large-scale "smash and grab" retail
theft went viral.
Residents, including some deep-pocketed Republicans, blamed Boudin's
policies and launched a recall petition.
"It is a radical ideology that has upset everyone:
left, right, gay, straight, young, old, male or female," said Richie
Greenberg, a local independent activist and spokesperson for the
recall effort.
Boudin's supporters say robberies and other crimes shifted from
tourist areas to residential ones as a result of the pandemic,
creating the perception of a crime surge. They point to data that
shows a more nuanced reality, with assaults and rapes decreasing
during the period, even as homicides and shootings increased.
Still, said Lara Bazelon, a law professor at the University of San
Francisco and a Boudin defender, "People are feeling less safe
regardless of what the stats say."
Opinion polls show Boudin likely to be recalled on Tuesday. A
replacement would be chosen by the city's mayor, London Breed, a
Democrat who has criticized Boudin but has not taken a stance on the
recall.
In Los Angeles, Rick Caruso, a billionaire developer and former
Republican, is battling U.S. Representative Karen Bass and a host of
other liberal candidates in the mayoral election.
Caruso, who has spent more than $30 million of his own money in the
campaign, made crime the centerpiece of his candidacy in a city that
saw homicides reach a 15-year high in 2021. That forced Bass, a
longtime progressive champion in Congress, to move to the center and
pledge to put more police on the streets. Caruso and Bass could be
headed to a runoff, polls show.
Republicans think crime could be a winning political issue in a
number of congressional races, including in the suburbs of
Minneapolis, New York City and Portland.
The party has already gone after Democratic Senate candidates in
battleground states on crime, with Cheri Beasley in North Carolina
an early target.
Republican-funded TV ads have assailed Beasley's record, saying in
one that she "failed to protect" child crime victims. Beasley, the
former chief justice of the state Supreme Court, on Twitter called
the ad "misleading" and warned more were to come.
She answered with an ad of her own, touting her efforts as chief
justice to keep human traffickers off the streets.
"I'll never stop fighting to make North Carolina safe," she says.
(Reporting by James Oliphant; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Rosalba
O'Brien)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |