The Daily - The Field: Policing and Power in Minneapolis
Episode Date: September 25, 2020This episode contains strong language. In June, weeks after George Floyd was killed by the police, a veto-proof majority of the Minneapolis City Council expressed support for dismantling the city’s ...police department.The councilors’ pledges to “abolish,” “dismantle” and “end policing as we know it” changed the local and national conversation about the police.President Trump has wielded this decision and law-and-order arguments in his campaigning — Midwestern states like Wisconsin, Michigan and Minnesota may be decisive in the general election.He has claimed that Joseph R. Biden Jr. wants to defund the police — which he does not — and told voters that they would not be safe in “Biden’s America.”On the ground in Minneapolis, Astead Herndon, a national politics reporter, speaks to activists, residents and local politicians about the complexities of trying to overhaul the city’s police.Guest: Astead W. Herndon, a national politics reporter for The New York Times, speaks to Black Visions Collective co-director, Miski Noor; Jordan Area Community Council executive director, Cathy Spann; and Minneapolis City Council president, Lisa Bender. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily Background reading: Across America there have been calls from some activists and elected officials to defund, downsize or abolish police departments. What would efforts to defund or disband the police really mean?In the wake of George Floyd’s killing, some cities asked if the police are being asked to do jobs they were never intended to do. Budgets are being re-evaluated.
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Today, we resume our series about the voters and the country in the lead-up to the election. Whoa!
Oh.
Ha, ha, ha!
That beep means that Ested forgot the keys in the car.
From the New York Times, this is The Field.
I'm Ested Herndon in Minnesota.
So this is Powderhorn Park in South Minneapolis.
There's a big lake in the middle with a pathway wrapped around it.
Pretty quiet neighborhood.
So much has happened in the city since the killing of George Floyd.
Justice! No peace!
Prosecute the police!
This is a police station burning out of control overnight.
The National Guard has been deployed to the...
Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin is in custody.
And it was here where an event happened that really changed the trajectory of the relationship
between Minneapolis and police.
On June 7th, there was an event put on by two social justice organizations in Minneapolis,
groups called Reclaim the Block
and Black Visions Collective.
Black people and queer people and trans people and indigenous people and disabled people
and immigrants and poor people, we have never looked to the police for our safety.
There's a stage, there's littered crowds around.
In front of the stage, letters spell out, defund police.
We're here because now is the time to dismantle MPD.
Then they bring up nine members of the city council.
Yes, they out here, y'all. This is brave, you know?
The first council member to speak is Lisa Bender.
Hi, Minneapolis. You look so beautiful today. The first council member to speak is Lisa Bender, the president of the city council,
and she makes a clear pledge.
Our commitment is to end our city's toxic relationship with the Minneapolis Police Department,
to end policing as we know it, and to recreate systems of public safety that actually keep us safe.
And one by one,
This council is going to dismantle this police department.
the other city councilors take the microphone,
All that money has been going into the police department,
and what have we gotten in return?
Pain, trauma, and hurt.
And read statements in support.
That we should and can abolish our current Minneapolis police system. Just about an hour ago, you had a thousand people here
calling for the Minneapolis Police Department to be disbanded.
Immediately, the pledge by the city council at Powderhorn Park
is a national and international news story.
Nine of Minneapolis council's 13 members
say they would create a new system of public safety.
The council's president said she has a veto-proof majority
to move forward with the plan.
That a majority of the city council,
a veto-proof majority of the city council, has
endorsed the idea of not just defunding but abolishing the police department.
This moment has transformed the conversation locally and nationally about policing reform.
The data is starting to show that voters are increasingly identifying the need to maintain
law and order as an election issue.
Let's talk about that one. increasingly identifying the need to maintain law and order as an election issue.
As the general election approaches, Midwestern states like Wisconsin, Michigan, and Minnesota may be decisive in the outcome.
Now they wanted to fund the entire department.
There's not going to be anybody to protect you.
And President Trump has been focusing a lot of energy in Minnesota.
And that's why I'm going to win the state of Minnesota.
I'm going to win Minnesota.
A state that he narrowly lost in Minnesota. And that's why I'm going to win the state of Minnesota. I'm going to win Minnesota. A state that he narrowly lost in 2016. He has used the city council's pledge that day as evidence for one of his rallying cries. If Biden and the left gain power, they will dismantle
police departments nationwide. I'll tell you, the community that's... But what's really happening
in Minneapolis? Is the police department going to be abolished?
And will it matter in November?
So this is Thursday morning, Estead's hotel room, phone call interviews.
This is the audio gold we need, Estead. Ested's hotel room, phone call interviews. Do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do-do.
This is the audio gold we need, Ested.
Come on.
Hello?
Hi, my name's Ested Herndon.
I'm a reporter with the New York Times.
Is this Miski?
This is Miski speaking, hi. Hi, thanks for taking someed Herndon. I'm a reporter with the New York Times. Is this Miski? This is Miski speaking. Hi.
Hi. Thanks for taking some time out. I appreciate it.
Miski Noor is an activist with Black Visions Collective, one of the groups responsible for bringing the city council to the event at Powderhorn Park.
Yes, I'm one of the founding core team members, and I'm also co-director of the organization.
Minneapolis as a whole is a very progressive place.
The mayor, Jacob Fry, is a liberal Democrat.
All 13 members of the city council consider themselves to be progressives.
But even within this kind of progressive bubble,
Black Visions stands out as one of the most powerful social justice organizations.
And while for many people, the idea of abolishing the police
may seem like it was born this summer,
Black Visions has actually been fighting for this for years.
And so in 2018,
we started actually putting pressure
on our city council and our mayor
around the police budget.
Miske says their first public push
toward dismantling the police department in Minneapolis
came in 2018.
And we were actually able to win
and move $1.1 million out of the Minneapolis Police Department
and move that into the Office for Violence Prevention,
which was really, really exciting.
If you all needed to push the city council
to get a $1 million reduction in the budget,
and then earlier this year, the city council announces that it will seek to dismantle the
police department altogether, that seemed like a large gap to me.
How did that change happen?
Yeah.
To understand how that change happened, you have to understand what transpired in the
week between two city council meetings in late May and early June.
Thank you, everyone. And thank you, Mayor, for your.
On May 30th, just days after George Floyd's death, one of the main topics of discussion.
Really for two nights in a row, there was really no law enforcement presence in North Minneapolis.
there was really no law enforcement presence in North Minneapolis.
Was the need for a stronger police response in certain neighborhoods in order to stop rioting. I was on site with friends trying to help put out the fire at the Fade Factory, formerly known as Mr. Afro.
And as far as what to do about police reform.
Minneapolis is going to take community engagement and the solution should grow from the grass roots, so to speak, reform. It's clear the council was open to suggestions.
And then, that week,
I hear you, Brad!
Our city council members experienced the response of our community.
They saw the response in the streets.
They saw the escalation.
What's left for me to do when I've turned both cheeks?
The righteous rage, the pain, the grief, the anger put pressure on them for them to understand that people are way past reform and are demanding true transformation and true safety in our city.
This country was built on the backs of people of color and enough. Come on, somebody. Enough is enough is enough is enough.
Enough is enough is enough is enough.
By the next city council meeting on June 5th. As a council member, I will tell you that I am not interested in any more reforms.
The tone had clearly shifted.
I'm committed to complete transformation.
I am seeing so many people stepping up and saying this system does not work,
this system cannot be reformed and we must do something different.
People and myself are just done with incremental change. It's been tried for decades.
We know that then we have to completely rethink public safety for our city.
And we also know that our community is tired.
They've asked for change over and over and over, and they want to see urgency.
And the next day, on June 6th, there was a now infamous scene of Mayor Fry being surrounded by activists outside his house.
That event was actually led by Black Visions.
There was a relatively large group of people that were protesting that came to my home.
They asked that I come out.
Are you going to vow right now?
This is the only question we have for you.
To abolish the Minneapolis Police Department?
You know it's right.
At the time, the scene made the mayor look incredibly vulnerable against the momentum of the movement and the will of the people.
He's asked in that moment to make a commitment.
I want it to be straightforward. I answered their question honestly and directly.
I do not support honestly and directly.
I don't support abolishing the police department.
And he slowly makes his way through the crowd,
back toward his home, J.C.! Go home! And he slowly makes his way through the crowd, back toward his home, looking defeated.
J.C.! J.C.! J.C.! J.C.! And the next day, on June 7th...
All of us on this stage support this statement,
and we stand with the people...
Black Visions and Reclaim the Block
hold that event at Powderhorn Park
with the city council members.
Let's go! Get up, y'all! We are transforming our city right now. Get up.
I think that they could not deny the moment. I think that they had to feel the will of the people.
And these were solutions we were already talking about. And so I want to make it really clear that like,
it's not that Minneapolis has some magically progressive city council, but because community
members and organizers have been putting pressure on them to do the right thing.
And that is why we believe the true power lies with the people.
But when you speak with the people of Minneapolis...
I don't want to see the police department being dismantled.
I want the police department to be reformed.
I want new policing.
It gets more complicated.
Do you guys want to just walk down here?
Sure.
Okay.
Yeah, you take us.
So this is your neighborhood.
Well, yeah. Okay. Yeah, you take us. So this is your neighborhood. Well, yeah.
Okay, so.
We met Kathy Spann in the Jordan neighborhood of North Minneapolis.
I'm the executive director of the Jordan Area Community Council.
Now, we are the neighborhood association for this area.
It's a majority Black neighborhood of around 8,000 people.
Kathy's been here for nearly 30 years. What I love is you know people.
Like, you know the business owners and you wave.
You know Sammy's at Sammy Avenue Eatery.
You know the guys at Urban Homeworks.
You know the staff at Juxtaposition.
And it's just like, hey, how's it going?
Kathy says the city council vote marked a turning point.
We're going to walk just a little bit.
And up here on 23rd and Emerson was one of our shootings.
So that's why we're not going to walk a lot in the neighborhood.
We've had shootings at 23rd and James, 23rd and Irving, 23rd and Emerson, 27th and Oliver, on Knox, on Queen.
We've had shootings on Lowry at the gas station area.
We have been under siege with gunfire.
It's true that, like in other cities, there's been a pronounced uptick in violence in Minneapolis this summer.
Since Memorial Day, violent crime is up 25% compared to the same period last year.
And violent crime in North Minneapolis neighborhoods, like Jordan, is up even more, over 30% from the year-to-date annual average.
You made an announcement, and people heard two things, dismantle, defund. And for some people with a criminal element, I don't know what they heard.
They must have heard, no police.
But the violence escalated.
While Kathy draws a direct line from the city council pledge to criminal behavior,
we can't say that for sure.
What we can say is that the protest movement and the city council pledge affected police behavior.
The mayor has announced that dozens of officers have left the department so far this year, going on medical leave or quitting the force entirely.
And because of the economic devastation from the coronavirus lockdowns, the city of Minneapolis has enacted a hiring freeze through 2021.
So no more police officers will be brought on the force for a long time.
All in all, the mayor says he expects 100 officers to leave by the end of this year.
And I do fault them for that, yes.
When you think about the moment in Powderham Park where they made the pledge, what did you think when you heard it?
I think emotionally, this is a hot topic for all of us.
And I think that, I think they were emotionally charged to try to do the right thing.
I want to believe that their intent was right.
The track to get to righteousness was wrong
because what they didn't do
after they had this enormous announcement,
they didn't think about the impact
on black and brown communities such as this.
They didn't engage black and brown people to say,
what should we do?
What should we do?
This is the path that we're going down.
Is this the right path?
They put together a plan on a Wednesday, put it to a vote on a Friday,
sent it to the Charter Commission,
and the Charter Commission started doing their due diligence.
Kathy's talking about a piece of legislation the city council drafted at the end of June to formalize the pledge that they took in the park.
After they made their park announcement,
the city council began the bureaucratic work of making it possible to dismantle the police department.
And they realized that the city's charter,
the document that defines the structure
of city government in Minneapolis,
specifically mandates a minimum number of police officers,
as well as police oversight from the mayor's office
rather than the city council.
This presented a problem for the city councilors.
In order to dismantle the police department,
the council would first have to change that city charter.
And in order to change the charter, they'd have to propose a charter amendment that would have to be voted on by residents.
In order to get that charter amendment on the ballot this year to be voted on,
it would need to be approved by the city's charter commission, an unelected, mostly white volunteer group.
On Wednesday, June 24th, the city council drafted an amendment to replace the police department with
a quote, department of community safety and violence prevention unquote. The new agency will
quote, prioritize a holistic and public health-oriented approach, unquote, to public safety.
And it would be overseen by the council and not the mayor.
It's said that within this new system, the council may maintain a division of armed officers.
But there were no specific details about the makeup of the agency.
Two days later, and without any public hearing,
the council unanimously voted to send that proposal to the Charter Commission.
So what do we do? We dismantle and disband the police department, and then what? Then what?
Kathy was upset. She and many others felt this new Department of Community Safety and Violence Prevention was way too vague.
Who do I call in cases of a rape? Who do I call in cases of domestic violence?
Who do I call if I have a child that is mentally ill? Who do I call?
I said, there's something about what they're trying to do does not sit right with me.
It feels like they're violating my civil rights.
I feel like they're violating my human rights because I have a right to be safe in my home, on these streets.
I have a right to be safe.
I said, I'm going to sue the city of Minneapolis.
Kathy sued the city, along with seven other residents,
alleging that Minneapolis' leaders have violated their duties
to fund,
employ, and manage a police force as required by the city charter. It's a lawsuit that's ongoing.
And then, in early August, the city charter commission voted 10-5 to spend more time
reviewing the city council's charter proposal, killing any chances of it being on the ballot
this year, and guaranteeing there
would be no significant steps to dismantle the police department in Minneapolis until at least
2021. Who's the rep for this area? For the council? Council member Jeremiah Ellison. So he took the pledge. He did. Kathy's council representative is Jeremiah
Ellison, one of the most, if not the most, outspoken proponents of dismantling the police department.
So what is the disconnect between what you're saying the residents here
want and needed and what the elected official says the residents want and need it? Is he listening?
And that's what I'm going to say.
Is he truly listening?
And I think that if you step back and truly listen,
he will see that residents are saying,
we want a system that is reformed.
We do want new policing. We do want it to be a different approach to how they handle and
treat Black men and Black women. We do want that. But we need a system that also protects us.
Polling conducted by the Minneapolis Star Tribune just after the Charter Commission vote
supports Kathy's position of wanting police reform, but not a full dismantling of the department.
In the poll, 73% of residents, including 76% of Black residents,
said Minneapolis should redirect some funding from the police department
to social services, such as mental health, drug treatment,
or violence prevention programs.
But when asked if they should reduce the size of its police force, 40% of residents said
they should, while 44% said they should not.
And among Black residents, only 35% said they should, while 50% said they should not.
And nearly half of those polled said they believe reducing the size of the police force
would have a negative effect
on public safety.
If you get rid of the police department, then what do you do?
What's the plan?
And that's all I'm saying.
What's the plan?
Have you seen a plan?
There you go.
There you go.
I felt like it was important that we commit to something like reimagining public safety altogether.
This is Jeremiah Ellison.
I think sometimes there's a give and take with this job.
You definitely have to be willing to listen to your constituents.
But you also cannot be leaderless in this role.
you also cannot be leaderless in this role.
And sometimes you have to be a little bit ahead of your time and be a little bit ahead of your constituency.
But I don't think that you can pass the baton when you're facing a moral question.
And I think that in those moments, it's important that you engage your moral compass. Win or lose, whatever the political risks, it's important that you engage your moral compass when you're facing an issue like that.
So the pledge says we are here today to begin the process of ending the Minneapolis Police Department. Is that something you still believe it should be a goal of city council and of local government?
Yeah, I do.
to be a goal of city council and of local government.
Yeah, I do.
Ellison stands behind the pledge to dismantle the police department.
But some of the other council members who were beside him on that stage at Powderhorn Park?
Like a pledge? What? I didn't raise my right hand.
I didn't sign a piece of paper on it. They seem to be backing off.
I supported the spirit of the statement, They seem to be backing off.
Councilmember Andrew Johnson says he stood with the pledge to dismantle the police department in spirit, but not in a literal sense? I would venture to say probably a majority were taking it in spirit.
You know, I talked with one colleague afterwards who, you know,
was kind of waxing and waning on what it meant.
And when you say end MPD, this colleague said, you know, I mean, technically, if you rename the department, you've ended MPD.
I saw the pledge as an aspiration,
for example, living in a police-free city.
Council Member Philippe Cunningham
took the pledge at Powderhorn, too.
I think that there has to be a clarification between the police department and law enforcement. So I do support the
replacement of the police department with a more comprehensive department of community safety and
violence prevention. That does not mean that I support the elimination of law enforcement.
And, you know, folks will define, defund, and dismantle differently. And so, you know, it's like when we say defund the police
in this particular context, it was reallocate some resources to that comprehensive approach
does not mean defund it to zero. No, we're not talking about abolishing the police.
The language from Powderhorn Park, it felt pretty clear at the time.
You said that you were going to begin the process of ending the Minneapolis Police Department.
And so I think it feels understandable why people would take that as you wanting to abolish the
police. Yes. And that's where the mistake was, because what we were talking about was ending it as it currently exists, which is as its own standalone entity.
I'm confused because you say that there was confusion amongst my colleagues that this pledge was an in-spirit and not literal thing.
Linnea Palmisano is one of three city council members who were not on stage at Powderhorn Park,
though she says the activist groups who organized the event did ask her to stand with the pledge.
They were very, very clear that the words in here are very literal.
They're meant to be taken quite seriously.
And if you don't ascribe to all of the language in this pledge,
then you are not welcome up on stage at this event
because we are pledging all of your colleagues here
as to whether or not they support this initiative.
How has this legislative body that seems so unified in June around dismantling the police,
even to the point of drafting legislation to open the door of replacing the police department,
become so scattered in their accounts of what it all meant.
Hi. Hi. Hi, my name is... We've been trying to get Lisa Bender, the council president,
to help us make sense of all this. On our last day in Minneapolis, she agreed to talk.
You're just doing audio, yes? Yeah, yeah. I mean, it's, yeah, nothing, this is,
you don't have to worry about your background. She said Miski Noor was right. Activist groups did play a big role in the council's pledge. They've organized in every ward of the city
in a sustained way since 2015. So council members all have relationships with those organizations to
varying degrees. Yeah, I guess I get that they have that they've been organizing consistently,
that they have these relationships. It didn't just start in that moment. But I mean, the pledge
moment is a unique one. So what led to taking that next step? Yep. Their initial ask was for a pledge related to cutting the police
budget. I did not feel comfortable in that moment signing on to a specific budget cut number.
But I did feel like I could commit to a value statement that I felt represented the majority
position of my constituents. You described the statement as a value set. The activists said
that they were very clear with the counselors that they meant a kind of literal endorsement
of the words. Was that clear to you at the time that this was a literal
endorsement of ending the Minneapolis Police Department? Yes. There are city councilors who
have told us this week that they said that in spirit and didn't mean it literally, that the
language in retrospect was confusing. Is that something that you look back on and agree with?
I do agree with the statement we made. I think we could have and need to be more clear about a realistic timeline for us to make that kind of change. I would more say that
we need to dismantle the police department as it stands and work toward a police-free future.
But, I mean, in my imagination, that is likely far away.
If it is likely far away, why did the council in this moment embrace that message?
For me, I think I am hearing more and more from my constituents.
Policing isn't working, right? And so we signed on to language that activist organizations asked us to support. And I think we could have been more ready to show how that pledge would translate into the city's bureaucratic process-oriented system.
bureaucratic, process-oriented system. That would have been very difficult to do. I mean,
so say we had taken another week and tried to come up with a community engagement plan that was ready to go. I mean, that would have been, I'm not sure we could have achieved that.
Because of the level of public pressure?
Because our city system doesn't work that fast.
Was there adequate community engagement before the pledge?
Yeah, it's a great question. At the time, I felt that the community engagement I have been doing as a council member for
many years supported the position I was taking.
But in retrospect, I think it could have benefited from more community engagement ahead of the
pledge. But at the same time, I mean, we also had thousands of people in the streets demanding change.
And again, not like reform your police department, demanding we need to rethink public safety as an institution.
I mean, we have to start somewhere.
So I'm not sure, I mean, you know, would a public hearing have helped?
Maybe.
You know, and maybe this is just a public perception thing rather than what you're describing,
but the pledge sucked up so much of the oxygen of what the council was pushing towards.
Did you know or expect that to happen?
No.
Yeah, I mean, I didn't realize how many council members would be there.
I didn't realize how much attention it would gather. Gather.
They're burning Minneapolis.
You don't think of Minneapolis that way, right?
You don't think of it. The city is burning down.
The defund movement has gathered a lot of attention.
While the local Democratic support isn't there, and it's stalled out in Minneapolis,
nationally, of course, it's become a central focus of the 2020 election,
as President Trump has seized on the message. Make no mistake, if you give power to Joe Biden,
the radical left will defund police departments all across America.
That the cities are out of control,
and that Joe Biden wants to defund the police.
No one will be safe in Biden's America.
My administration will always stand with the men and women of law enforcement.
And according to a recent poll conducted by the New York Times in four swing states,
which included Minnesota, Trump's messaging has been somewhat effective
in turning the attention of voters to what's happening in cities like Minneapolis.
Voters are now basically split on the question of whether the coronavirus or maintaining
law and order is a more important issue to them.
Voters in Minnesota and Wisconsin think that Joe Biden has not done enough to condemn violent
rioting.
And across the four swing states that The Times polled, 44% of voters believe Joe Biden supports defunding the police.
No, I don't support defunding the police. I support conditioning...
To be clear, he does not.
But a closer read of the poll shows something else.
The president's rhetoric has actually done little to affect Joe Biden's support in those same states.
He's leading President Trump by a nine-point margin in Minnesota.
That's seven points better than Clinton did in the state in 2016.
Because while the president has been able to turn the focus to law and order,
voters don't necessarily trust him to do a better job on the issue.
That 44% of voters who think Joe Biden wants to defund the police, that's mostly the president's
base, and they're not up for grabs anyway. And one way of understanding all those voters who
want Biden to be more forceful in condemning rioting is that they include ideologically
moderate voters who are genuinely troubled by the sight of looting and rioting is that they include ideologically moderate voters who are genuinely troubled
by the sight of looting and rioting and want Biden to offer a compelling counter-narrative
to President Trump on law and order because they may want Biden to be elected.
And looked at that way, while the Minneapolis City Council's actions may have helped the
president with the ammunition he needed to turn this into a national
campaign issue, those same actions by the city council have left Joe Biden in a fairly comfortable
position. It certainly didn't feel good watching the video afterwards, and it probably felt even a bit tougher during the moment.
You can look back now at that moment outside of Mayor Fry's house, days after George Floyd's death, when he refused to support abolishing the police, and it looks like he was out of step with his own city.
step with his own city. But during these times of great difficulty and turbulence, I feel strongly that you need elected leaders to show a sense of stability, of honesty, of integrity. And to me,
that just meant telling the truth. The mayor's rivals thought he was in political trouble.
I've seen text messages between city councilors at the time
saying the mayor missed the moral moment
and that their pledge would rise to meet it.
But in the end, it's that pledge that turns out
to be out of step to where the city is now.
A majority of Minneapolis residents,
like the majority of Americans, want police reform.
That is where so many people throughout our city are right now. They understand the need for deep structural change. They
understand that we need a full-on culture shift in the way our police department functions.
And they also understand that there are instances, sadly but truly, where you need to call 911 and you
need response from a police officer. Both of those things are true. But because the city council
rejected incremental change, the focus became about abolishing the police, an issue that neither
the majority of Minneapolis residents nor the majority of American support, it totally changed the political
conversation. As a result, the only pressure Democratic politicians like Mayor Fry and Joe
Biden have faced is to reject the most sweeping proposals from the progressive left. And that's
actually been good for Biden. Because while it might make him an uninspiring figure to some on
the progressive left,
his campaign has chosen a strategy that doesn't really depend on them.
They are aiming for a broader and more moderate coalition.
For Biden, it's those moderate voters he needs in November, especially in the Midwest.
And rejecting the defund movement only endears him to them.
So while you may hear both Mayor Frye and Biden embracing the language of systemic racism,
they face less pressure to actually put forward plans for reform.
And for a lot of Minneapolis residents and other Americans,
that's sort of the tragedy of the whole story.
Here's this moment when public sentiment, momentum, is really there for policing reform.
But that's not the conversation we've actually been having.
There's been little leadership, no clear path, and no plan for what reform will look like.
What this means is that the one thing people find most unacceptable, no change at all,
is the most likely outcome.
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