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Trump's latest attempt to tag Biden as a radical flops - POLITICO

Joe Biden declared he opposed a growing movement on the left to defund police departments.

President Donald Trump and Republicans are determined to make him own it anyway.

Trump lit into Biden on Twitter, painting him as the leader of the “radical left” and responsible for a movement that celebrates anarchy, coddles “antifa” and demonizes law enforcement.

But the swiftness and clarity of Biden's dismissal, which came as CBS, ABC’s “The View” and other media outlets were peppering Democratic politicians with questions about defunding the police, suggests Biden's team wanted to head off an issue it saw as politically poisonous.

And at least for now, they've succeeded. Biden emerged from the attacks on Monday without suffering any significant backlash from activists who've embraced the "defund" movement.

It was the latest attempt by Trump to tie Biden to the most far-left positions in the Democratic Party. The aim is to hurt the presumptive nominee among independents and "never Trump" Republicans while dividing the left and moderate flanks of the Democratic coalition.

Biden has banked his candidacy on a tried-and-true path in which he's moved left on some policies without going too far. His campaign points to that moderation as among the reasons that polling shows he’s eating into constituencies that Trump won in 2016, including suburban and older voters.

On Monday, moderates applauded Biden’s stance, which rejected cutting funds to police departments, but supported reforms and oversight.

And while it was the latest example of Biden knocking a left-wing idea embraced by his party’s activist base — he also opposed "Abolish ICE" and Medicare for All during the primary — by and large, progressives didn’t express the outright disdain for Biden that Trump might have been expecting.

It comes as raucous protests have swept across the country since George Floyd, an unarmed black man, was killed in police custody in Minneapolis as a white police officer pinned down his neck, exposing increasing tensions between police and the public. The calls to defund the police have a range of meanings to different groups, from demilitarizing police departments to disbanding traditional operations and moving to more community-based public safety.

Biden left no question about where he stands.

“No, I don't support defunding the police,” Biden told CBS’ Norah O’Donnell. “I support conditioning federal aid to police based on whether or not they meet certain basic standards of decency and honorableness and, in fact, are able to demonstrate, they can protect the community and everybody in the community.”

His campaign noted that Biden already proposed a criminal justice plan calling for $300 million more in funding to police departments in order to cover training, community policing and hiring of more officers, with some minority hiring requirements.

While progressives weren’t in an uproar over Biden’s stance, some were unhappy, calling his reaction rash, short-sighted, and saying he needed to spend more time listening.

“The current notion of policing in America must be dismantled. And that is why you see city councils like Minneapolis and other elected bodies on the local and state level doing just that,” said former Bernie Sanders campaign co-chair Nina Turner. “So for the vice president to reject the notion out of hand is showing a tone-deafness that the black community certainly can’t afford for anybody vying for the presidency to have.”

Scott Roberts, senior director of criminal justice campaigns for the racial justice organization Color Of Change, called Biden’s comments “disappointing.”

"I feel like it’s not a reaction that’s rooted in a lot of reflection, frankly,” Roberts said. “I don’t know that Sen. Biden has taken the time to talk to groups that are leading this charge to defund the police.”

Pennsylvania state Rep. Summer Lee, a democratic socialist who helped stage a takeover Monday of the speaker’s rostrum in the state capitol with other lawmakers to demand police reforms, said she is concerned about the “inherent disrespect” expressed by the Biden campaign.

"I understand that this is a scary notion, thinking about restructuring the society that we know, and he’s been in this society for a very long time. Taking the time to consider why people of a different generation, a different background, of a different socioeconomic status, why they are thinking in a way that he’s not there yet,” she said. “My fear is ... that he’s not taking the time to even understand the perspective before making his rash decision."

In quickly rejecting the call, however, Biden will make it more difficult for Trump to position himself as the law-and-order president trying to beat back a challenger who embraces lawlessness. Biden has a long history as a pro-law enforcement Democrat: His authorship of the 1994 crime bill has been an ongoing source of criticism, including from Trump himself.

In a press call on Monday, Trump surrogate Carolyn “Bunny” Welsh, former sheriff of Chester County, Pennsylvania, blamed Biden for the new "defund the police" slogan, saying the former vice president “owns this movement.”

“He has basically turned his back on law enforcement,” Welsh said.

Even if unpopular with the left flank of the party, Biden’s stance aligns with top Democrats in Congress, said Matt Bennett of the center left group Third Way.

“He is doing the classic Republican scare-mongering,” Bennett said of Trump. “He has seized on this because he has nothing else, literally nothing. As an opportunity to make people afraid, because that’s what he does.”

Former Barack Obama senior adviser David Axelrod called Biden's move "the right position."

"Fundamental change — re-imagining public safety, rethinking how money is allocated and doing it in partnership with the community — is essential," Axelrod said. "But very few people would embrace the elimination of police with nothing to replace them. Trump would have a field day with that. He's already trying to weaponize the words."

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