Minneapolis lawmakers vow to disband police department in historic move
The Minneapolis city council has pledged to disband
the city’s police department and replace it with a new system of public safety,
a historic move that comes as calls to defund law enforcement are sweeping the
US.
Speaking at a community rally on Sunday, a
veto-proof majority of councilmembers declared their intent to “dismantle” and
“abolish” the embattled police agency responsible for George Floyd’s death –
and build an alternative model of community-led safety. The decision is a
direct response to the massive protests that have taken over American cities in
the last two weeks, and is a major victory for abolitionist activists who have
long fought to disband police and prisons.
“In Minneapolis and in cities across the US, it is
clear that our system of policing is not keeping our communities safe,” said
Lisa Bender, the Minneapolis city council president, at the event. “Our efforts
at incremental reform have failed, period. Our commitment is to do what’s
necessary to keep every single member of our community safe and to tell the
truth: that the Minneapolis police are not doing that. Our commitment is to end
policing as we know it and to recreate systems of public safety that actually
keep us safe.”
Nine councilmembers announced their support and
represent a supermajority on the twelve-person council, meaning the mayor, who
earlier this weekend opposed disbanding the department, cannot override them.
The remaining three councilmembers are broadly supportive of the effort as
well, but weren’t ready to sign on, activists said. While the mayor has
oversight over the police, the city council has authority over the budget and
policy, and could work to dismantle the department through cuts and ordinances.
The formal effort to abolish a major-city police
department in America and replace it with a different model of safety would
have been unthinkable even weeks ago and is a testament to the impact of the
protests that began with Floyd’s death on 25 May. The unarmed 46-year-old was
killed by Minneapolis police when an officer kneeled on his neck for nearly
nine minutes as he pleaded for him to stop. Four officers now face criminal
charges.
“This is a
moment that’s going to go down in history as a landmark in the police and
prison abolition movement,” said Tony Williams, a member of MPD150, a
Minneapolis group whose literature on building a “police-free future” has been
widely shared during the protests. “There’s a groundswell of support for this.
People are grounded in the history of policing in a way that has never happened
before. It’s visible that police are not able to create safety for
communities.”
The councilmembers are expected to face opposition
from law enforcement officials and the police union, though activists emphasize
that the veto-proof majority has the authority to move forward regardless of
opposition.
“It’s pretty clear the political will is here, and
they can’t stop it,” said Williams, noting that even if police officers opposed
the move, a vast majority of them live outside of Minneapolis and can’t vote on
their elected leaders.
Spokespeople for the Minneapolis mayor did not
immediately respond to inquiries Sunday. The police department declined to
comment.
After Minneapolis’ mayor, Jacob Frey, wouldn’t
commit to abolishing the police at a demonstration on Saturday, protesters
shouted, “Go home, Jacob!” and “Shame!” until he left. Minneapolis is also home
to a powerful union leader who has aggressively resisted any reforms to the
department despite the agency’s history of racial abuse.
Lawmakers and advocates across the US will likely be
closely watching what happens next in Minneapolis. It’s unclear how quickly
this process could move, and what the transition could look like. Supporters
are pushing for the council to start with taking money away from the police
budget and investing in other government departments, social services and
programs, while launching a community process for creating alternative systems.
An alternative safety model, advocates say, can
start with finding “non-police solutions to the problems poor people face”,
such as counselors responding to mental health calls and addiction experts
responding to drug abuse.
Like many US municipalities, Minneapolis was already
facing a budget shortfall due to the Covid-19 crisis, and defunding police
could help address some of those gaps. There are a handful of examples of
governments disbanding troubled local police agencies in the US over the years,
though the authorities have had other regional law enforcement entities take
over policing.
Police reforms around the country
While the effort in Minneapolis is the most radical,
a number of other US mayors and local leaders have reversed their positions on
police funding. The mayor of Los Angeles said he would look to cut as much as
$150m from the police this week, just days after he pushed forward a city
budget that was increasing it by 7%.
Following days of protests and widespread accounts
of police misconduct in New York City, mayor Bill de Blasio said Sunday that
some funding would be moved from the police to “youth initiatives and social
services”. Some councilmembers and others, however, have been pushing for a
$1bn divestment from the NYPD.
“The details
will be worked out in the budget process in the weeks ahead, but I want people
to understand that we are committed to shifting resources to ensure that the
focus is on our young people,” de Blasio said. “And I also will affirm while
doing that, we will only do it in a way that we are certain continues to ensure
that this city will be safe.”
De Blasio also announced that enforcement of
regulations involving street vendors – many of whom are persons of color and,
or immigrants – should not be handled by police. “Civilian agencies can work on
proper enforcement and that’s what we’ll do going forward,” he said.
In Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington DC, San
Francisco and other cities, local policymakers have expressed support for some
form of defunding or opposing police budget increases in the last week.
For years, abolitionist groups have advocated for
governments to take money away from police and prisons and reinvesting the
funds in other services. The basic principle is that government budgets and
“public safety” spending should prioritize housing, employment, community
health, education and other vital programs, instead of police officers.
Advocates for defunding argue that recent police
reform efforts have been unsuccessful, noting that de-escalation training, body
cameras and other moves have not stopped racist brutality and killings. Police
in America kill more people in days than many other countries do in years.
Amid the current protests, abolitionist groups have
put forward concrete steps toward dismantling police and prisons, arguing that
defunding police is the first move, and that cities need to remove police from
schools, repeal laws that “criminalize survival” such as anti-homelessness
policies, provide safe housing for people and more. Colleges, public school
systems, museums and other institutions have also increasingly announced plans
to divest from police.
The Minneapolis announcement could inspire other
cities to follow, Williams said: “I do believe we are on the precipice of a
major global shift. I’m really hopeful in this moment.”




