This week, the House passed H.R. 7120, the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act. As I've said many times in my newsletters, the name of a bill does not reflect the content and oftentimes a bill with a nice-sounding title is named as such to distract from what is actually inside of it. That is what happened this week and, regrettably, House Democrats ignored this opportunity to make real change and used it to pass a bill filled with provisions that would make the entire police force, including the good officers, which is the vast majority, less effective and more liable to frivolous lawsuits.
While it is my sincere belief that state and local governments should take action to terminate officers who are repeatedly misbehaving, the vast majority of cops are good and do a great job protecting our communities. That is not to say that there aren't unscrupulous police officers. A better way to approach police reform would be as I did during my time as a State Senator in Madison, where I introduced a bill that would have made it easier for police departments to terminate officers for misconduct. Sadly, that bill was not passed.
I did not vote for H.R. 7120, and have urged Nancy Pelosi and House leadership to consider commonsense legislation that would allow police departments to terminate officers for misconduct without punishing good officers with one-size-fits-all regulations. I thank Wisconsin’s police forces and the brave men and women who put their lives on the line every day to keep us safe.
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