"Sen. Mark Warner said progressives' calls to 'defund the police' were in part to blame for Democratic losses in the House in a cycle when the party was expected to gain seats," The Hill tells us. "How ’defund the police' sabotaged Democrats on Election Day," Clarence Page of the Chicago Tribune writes."'Defund the police’ is killing our party, and we’ve got to stop it," said South Carolina Representative Jim Clyburn. In the wake of the Democrats’ disappointing Congressional showing in last month’s elections, centrist Democrats and their media mouthpieces were quick to blame Black Lives Matter and the "defund the police" movement for their subpar results.
There’s only one problem: there is no empirical basis for this claim in any of the above comments or reports. No studies, no evidence––not even anecdotally––is provided. Before the printer ink was dry on the ballots, centrist Democrats who lost or underperformed––or made a career out of defending those that do––rushed to blame the so-called "defund the police" movement, highlighting rightwing attack ads featuring the label. After some initial goodwill immediately following the global outpouring of protests after the horrific police murder of George Floyd, mainstream democratic party line has reverted back to it’s old playbook of blaming the Left and Black activists for offending or alienating a nebulous cohort of moderate white voters.
As the economy crashed and the world was turned upside down in the Spring of 2020, Democratic leaders had a chance to lobby for robust social welfare programs, guaranteed income, mortgage and rent cancellation and single payer healthcare to get us through this ongoing crisis, whose disastrous implications will extend well beyond the introduction of a vaccine. Instead, however, they lowered expectations, blamed Trump for their own unforced ideological limitations and almost never publicly took credit for the extension of unemployment benefits––the one good thing Democrats actually did achieve, albeit fleeting.
The result was a once in a generation opportunity blown, a possible leftwing shock doctrine that was crippled by unmovable austerity ideology. So when the elections came around and the Democrats underperformed, who was to blame? It can’t be party leadership blowing the COVID-19 response and it can’t be the security state-curated centrist tofu candidates who lost or barely won. It has to––once again––be those pesky far left activists. Because Democratic party leadership cannot fail they can only be failed, a scapegoat was needed.
On this week’s episode we discuss why "defund the police" and the broader abolitionist movement was that scapegoat, the long history of concern trolling Black activism and perennially blaming movements for justice for right-wing, white backlash from bad faith actors. We also detail how activists are now on the defensive as Democrats, having successfully exploited the broad sentiment of the George Floyd protests for Get Out The Vote fodder, now seek to lower expectations, purge Black Lives Matter of its truly radical elements, and go back to business as usual.
Our guest is human rights lawyer and abolitionist Derecka Purnell.
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Derecka Purnell is a human rights lawyer, writer, and organizer. She is currently a columnist at The Guardian. Her new book, Abolition: An Invitation, will be published in Fall 2021.
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How I Became a Police Abolitionist
Derecka Purnell | July 6, 2020 | The Atlantic
Editorial Board | January 19, 1859 | The New York Times
‘Defund the Police’ Actually Means Defunding the Police
Edward Ongweso, Jr. | June 9, 2020 | VICE
Yes, We Mean Literally Abolish the Police
Mariame Kaba | June 12, 2020 | The New York Times
Abolish These Police Departments
Alex Pareene | June 17, 2020 | The New Republic
Joise Duffy Rice | August 25, 2020 | Vanity Fair
The Only Solution Is to Defund the Police
Alex S. Vitale | May 31, 2020 | The Nation
Black Americans are in an abusive relationship with the Democratic party
Derecka Purnell | May 22, 2020 | The Guardian
How White Backlash Controls American Progress
Lawrence Glickman | May 21, 2020 | The Atlantic
Polls Showed Many Americans Opposed to Civil Rights Protests in the 1960s. But That Changed.
David Sirota | June 12, 2020 | Jacobin
How the Police Helped Get Biden Elected
Brentin Mock | November 12, 2020 | Bloomberg CityLab
Inside Biden’s Meeting With Civil Rights Leaders
Ryan Grim | December 10, 2020 | The Intercept
This Democratic congresswoman just spoke some hard truth to her party
Chris Cillizza | November 6, 2020 | CNN
‘Defund The Police’ Cost Democrats Seats In Congress, Says Top House Official
Jemima McEnvoy | November 8, 2020 | Forbes
No, Defund The Police and Medicare For All Didn’t Lead To Democratic Losses In The House
Aidan Smith | November 9, 2020 | The Appeal
Defund the police: Not as scary (or new) as it sounds
Editorial Board | June 8, 2020 | The Baltimore Sun
How Americans Feel About ‘Defunding The Police’
Nathaniel Rakich | June 19, 2020 | FiveThirtyEight
How ‘Defund the Police’ Roiled Competitive Races in New York
Luis Ferré-Sadurní and Jesse McKinley | November 6, 2020 | The New York Times
In Minnesota and Beyond, ‘Defund the Police’ Weighed on Democrats
Kris Maher and John McCormick | November 18, 2020 | The Wall Street Journal
The Police Can’t Solve the Problem. They Are the Problem.
Derecka Purnell and Marbre Stahly-Butts | September 26, 2019 | The New York Times
Fred Powledge | September 21, 1964 | The New York Times
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For a full transcript of this episode, go here.
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Kevin Varzandeh
2020-12-21 06:55:21 +0000 UTCJaisal Noor
2020-12-19 15:44:56 +0000 UTCCiaran Colley
2020-12-18 09:17:15 +0000 UTCBen Gialenios
2020-12-17 18:08:19 +0000 UTCAlex
2020-12-17 14:44:10 +0000 UTCJohn
2020-12-17 03:35:11 +0000 UTCDylan Thompson
2020-12-16 23:35:59 +0000 UTC