Published: 17:35, June 18, 2020 | Updated: 00:12, June 6, 2023
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Trump weighs in on police procedures
By Zhao Huanxin in Washington

US President Donald Trump put his own stamp on improving policing by signing an executive order on Tuesday to incentivize police departments to adopt best practices and strengthen a national database to track misconduct, as Congress moves toward legislation but faces a partisan divide.

Among the highlights of the executive action is a prohibition on the use of chokeholds except when a police officer's life is in danger

Among the highlights of the executive action is a prohibition on the use of chokeholds except when a police officer's life is in danger. Chokeholds have become a symbol of police brutality following the May 25 death of George Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, after a white Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes.

Restrictions on the use of chokeholds are also included in police reform legislation being crafted by Republicans that shares common ground with the Democrats' police bill, unveiled last Monday, which also proposes a chokehold ban.

"Reducing crime and raising standards are not opposite goals. They are not mutually exclusive. They work together," Trump said in the White House Rose Garden. "That is why today I'm signing an executive order encouraging police departments nationwide to adopt the highest professional standards to serve their communities."

The executive order encourages de-escalation training, better recruitment and provides more resources for "co-responder programs" that would help pair local police with mental health experts or social workers to address situations.

But Trump did not mention the issue of racism in police forces and calls from activists and Democratic lawmakers for sweeping reform to combat police brutality and racial injustice, which have fueled mass protests across the country over the past few weeks.

Instead, he said "Americans want law and order", and that he strongly opposed the "radical and dangerous" efforts to defund, dismantle or dissolve police departments.

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Vanita Gupta, president and CEO of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, tweeted that if Trump is truly committed to ending police violence, he must support "real, comprehensive" accountability measures to fundamentally change policing culture and invest in black communities and others hardest hit by over-criminalization.

"It's a piecemeal effort that won't achieve the transformative change needed to heal America," Gupta said on Twitter on Tuesday.

Partisan divide

Democratic leaders also called the executive order "modest" and "weak".

"The president's weak executive order falls sadly and seriously short of what is required to combat the epidemic of racial injustice and police brutality that is murdering hundreds of Black Americans," US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement.

Chuck Schumer, the Senate minority leader, said on Tuesday that while the president has finally acknowledged the need for policing reform, one modest executive order will not make up for his years of "inflammatory rhetoric" and policies designed to roll back the progress made in previous years.

The New York Democrat said Congress needs to quickly pass "strong and bold" legislation with provisions that make it easier to hold police officers accountable for abuses and that Trump must commit to signing it into law.

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The legislation proposed by Democrats and the one being prepared by Republicans may end up having some areas of overlap-for example, both are expected to support the creation of a national database to make it harder for officers accused of misconduct to transfer from one department to another, according to US media reports.

But Democrats' call for eliminating "qualified immunity" for both police and correctional officers was deemed by the White House as "a step too far". As an alternative, Senator Tim Scott, a South Carolina Republican who is organizing his party's police reform legislation, is considering a "decertification" process for officers involved in misconduct, The Associated Press reported on Tuesday.