But it beats running on their agenda to kill Social Security and Medicare
Graphic: FBI |
If you’re trying to process all those political ads you’re seeing about crime, you’d better look at the facts.
First of all, why are we hearing
about this now?
Republican-appointed justices just
canceled the right to abortion. Most Republicans oppose acting to protect us
from climate change. And with its embrace of the January 6 coup attempt, the
GOP no longer supports American constitutional democracy.
But are Republicans running on that
unpopular platform? Not really. Instead, they’ve unleashed a wave of ads claiming
there’s a crime wave.
The reality is more complex.
Crime rates in America have dropped
dramatically since the 1990s, falling from a peak of 750 violent crimes for
every 100,000 people under George H. W. Bush to a low of 360 under Barack
Obama.
Violent crime has slightly risen
more recently, increasing 5 percent during the last year of
Donald Trump’s presidency. Those rates continued rising during President
Biden’s first year in office. Robberies have increased somewhat this year, but
so far violent crimes like homicides and rapes are down in most major
cities.
Should we blame Donald Trump for the
increase in murders during his final year as president? Or for the fact that
overall crime rates went up 30 percent during his last two years?
What about the fact that states that
voted for Trump in 2020 had murder rates 40 percent higher than those won by
Joe Biden?
The reality is that many factors affect the rise and fall of crime rates. And they don’t have much to do with who’s in the White House, Congress, or the governor’s mansion.
They also don’t have much to do with
how many people are in jail. Cities with progressive prosecutors have
scaled back prosecutions for nonviolent misdemeanors, diverted defendants to
treatment programs, and recommended against cash bail. These cities don’t have significantly different crime rates from
other cities.
And while Republicans try to tie the
proposal to “de-fund the police” to the Democratic Party, no Democratic
candidate has actually called for eliminating police funding. House Democrats
passed a bill just last month granting $300 million to local police departments.
Republican efforts to tie crime to
the Black Lives Matter movement or race are also baseless — more than 93 percent of the racial justice demonstrations were peaceful.
What Republicans really want their white voters to think is that Black
criminals are out to get them — another racist lie.
What might actually contribute to
violent crime? Guns. Gun ownership jumped by a record amount in 2020, and states with the highest rates of gun ownership have
the highest crime rates.
Combine this with the disruptions in
life caused by the pandemic, and you have a formula for rising crime.
“People and communities faced
challenges in meeting basic needs” throughout the worst of the pandemic,
the Brennan Center for Justice notes. “Many endured trauma
caused by sickness and death,” especially when parents or caregivers died from
COVID-19.
“These sudden and unprecedented
hardships jeopardized the stability of families and communities alike,” the
Brennan report continues. “They may have upset the informal social
processes — such as connections to neighbors, family members, and
employers — that some researchers believe help keep neighborhoods safe.”
Studies also indicate that the
trauma and isolation created by the pandemic contributed to an increase in
antisocial behavior at all levels of society, from aggressive driving to heavy alcohol and drug use.
Republicans have nothing to say
about the gun problem, other than promoting the wider dissemination of
firearms. They have nothing to say about the injuries society suffered from the
pandemic, other than continued denial. And in the end they have nothing
meaningful to say about addressing crime.
America faces giant challenges, from climate change to inequality to the menace of political violence. The GOP’s refusal to address these problems is the real crime wave.
Mitchell Zimmerman is an attorney, longtime social activist, and author of the anti-racism thriller Mississippi Reckoning. This op-ed was distributed by OtherWords.org. Read Progressive Charlestown's review of Mitchell's book HERE.