Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photos: Getty Images/Shutterstock/REUTERS Last year it seemed like policing in America might finally change, after the summer’s Black Lives Matter protests from coast to coast built a groundswell of support for major upheavals in law enforcement. Minneapolis captured the moment, where the city council pledged to disband the police department whose officer murdered George Floyd, the event that initially set off the protests.
India Walton, the socialist candidate who faces a general-election rematch against Buffalo mayor Byron Brown after beating him in the Democratic primary, relishes the chance to draw such fault lines. “A hypermilitarized and overfunded police department has not solved our crime problem, so we have to do something different,” she told Intelligencer.
Walton says that government leadership has “created the conditions to allow criminality to flourish,” partly through the defunding of public services. In Cleveland, candidate Justin Bibb talks of building “permanent supportive housing” for homeless people as a way to reduce the population of jails, where they often end up. He also wants to promote a denser network of retail and grocery stores, along with services like health-care facilities and libraries, within 15 minutes of where people live.
In Minneapolis, voters on Tuesday will decide whether the city should follow through on dissolving its police department and replace it with a Department of Public Safety that would juxtapose some policing functions with other services.
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