Democrats decided to take some sound ideas and ramp them up to Partisan Category 4
House Approves Police Reform Bill Named After George Floyd
House lawmakers on Wednesday passed the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, a police reform bill that would ban chokeholds and eliminate qualified immunity for law enforcement. The 220-212 vote came nine months after Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, was killed by Minneapolis police officers last spring.
The wide-ranging legislation would also ban no-knock warrants, mandate data collection on police encounters, prohibit racial and religious profiling and redirect funding to community-based policing programs.
“Never again should an unarmed individual be murdered or brutalized by someone who is supposed to serve and protect them,” said Rep. Karen Bass, D-Calif., in a statement. “Never again should the world be subject to witnessing what we saw happen to George Floyd in the streets in Minnesota.”
Banning chokeholds is nice, but, sometimes police need to use them to grab hold of a perp. It’s easy to ban them, but, in practice, when an officer is attempting to grab hold of a violent criminal, it is the easiest way to grab them. It’s knowing when to let go. But, it’s doing away with qualified immunity that is the worst part of this, and will lead to huge numbers of police officers quitting the force, especially in Democratic Party run areas where crime is rampant, and would see fewer people wanting to be police officers, making the rest of us who aren’t criminals less safe.
No knock warrants are a big problem, but shouldn’t be banned: they should be reformed to make sure there are more safeguards and a stronger approval method. Profiling? We all profile constantly, and police use profiles to understand potential crimes. “Community based policing programs”? Left wing idiocy which will make the rest of us less safe.
In debate on the House floor Wednesday evening before the vote, Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota said Minneapolis is still traumatized by Floyd’s death. “Time and time again we have witnessed the people who are sworn to protect our communities abuse their power,” she said.
Traumatized? She didn’t know George Floyd. Or his family. She’s just grandstanding. Perhaps she should ask the business owners who saw their businesses trashed by the rioters. And those who were assaulted. The families of those who couldn’t get their loved one to a hospital because Ilhan’s peeps were blocking the streets, or a fire truck couldn’t make it through the blocked roads.
(KYOUTV) Iowa Congresswomen Ashley Hinson and Mariannette Miller-Meeks both issued statements on their opposition to The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which was passed by the U.S. House of Representatives by a narrow vote of 220-212 on Wednesday night.
In Hinson’s statement, she wrote that “Law enforcement officers in Iowa and across this country put their lives on the line every day to keep our communities safe. It’s reprehensible that House Democrats would bring forward legislation to defund police departments while relying on law enforcement to protect our Capitol from imminent threats...In a chamber safeguarded by Capitol Police.
In her statement, Miller-Meeks wrote that “We need serious bipartisan police reform that holds bad officers accountable†but that “The Justice in Policing Act would eliminate qualified immunity, which would make recruitment and retention difficult,†adding that “In effect, this is a backdoor way to defund the police.â€
And this bill would interfere with States Rights on how to run their police departments. This is, as usual, a highly partisan bill. The GOP attempted to pass Senator Tim Scott’s JUSTICE Act, which was well thought out and didn’t destroy the police, but, Democrats blocked it with the filibuster (you know, that thing Democrats say they hate). Dems already knew the George Floyd bill was 100% partisan, but, still voted and passed it again. And, again, the only way it makes it through the Senate is with nuking the filibuster.
Filibuster or gridlock your choice
NO government employee should have Qualified Immunity.
Removing it from police is the only good thing in that bill.
Wait till the public finds out it wasn’t really the police that killed him-which is why Minneapolis has built a fortress around the court house-they’re preparing for the natives to riot if he’s found not guilty of the murder charge.. https://spectator.org/george-floyd-death-toxicology-report/
What a coincidence that he died of something else while the office had his knee on his neck.
Yea Jeff, you have taken care of so many overdose patients or those on street drugs. Once again, you comment but have zero knowledge of what it takes to subdue druggies.
George Floyd was a convicted felon, in the process of committing another felony when apprehended by the police, and who was high on fentanyl and methamphetamine, the possession and use of which are yet other crimes. The fallout from his death is terrible, but one thing is certain: Minneapolis and the country are better off with him stone-cold graveyard dead than with him alive.
Why is it that all of these black lives matter martyrs are bad people? Michael Brown? Just robbed a convenience store and assaulted a shopkeeper half his size. Breonna Taylor? The girlfriend and probably courier for a notorious drug dealer. Freddie Gray? Convicted felon, arrested for another felony. Walter Wallace? A mentally ill man charging the police with a knife.
There was only one truly innocent victim, Tamir Rice, who was just 12 years old, but he was playing with a realistic-looking toy gun, had the police called on him as a ‘man with a gun’ in the park, and then pointed it at the officers sent to check out the situation. He was an innocent, but his action of pointing a gun at the police led to his death, not racial discrimination.
Why is it that Philadelphia, which is only 41.5% black, had a near record 499 murders, for a 31.6 per 100,000 population, last year, and almost 90% of the victims and known perpetrators were black?