Listeners:
Top listeners:
play_arrow
Revolution Radio Your home for the best variety of Christian music
play_arrow
Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
play_arrow
Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network (Abovecast Backup) Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
play_arrow
Home For The Holidays Radio
We'll See About That with Ron Cey Episode 157 Leave Tom Hardy Alone! Ron Cey
WASHINGTON (UPI) — House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy said Thursday there could be room for a bipartisan agreement on police reform after Democrats released a plan earlier this week.
McCarthy said Republicans in the chamber agree with concepts included in the package unveiled by the Congressional Black Caucus and would be willing to compromise with Democrats despite launching their own bill.
“I think there’s a place where we can work together,” McCarthy said. “There’s a lot of concepts that we agree upon.”
Following two weeks of mass protests in response to the police-involved killing of George Floyd, House Democrats on Monday introduced the Justice in Policing Act of 2020.
The legislation includes reforms such as reducing the Federal standard for prosecuting police for misconduct, revising the “qualified immunity” law that shields officers from civil suits, creating a national misconduct database, limiting the transfer of military-grade weapons and barring “no-knock” warrants in drug cases.
McCarthy said he supports a ban on police chokeholds proposed by Democrats and did not explicitly name any provisions of the Democratic bill he opposes.
He went on, however, to accuse House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of “politicizing” the effort at police reform by keeping Republicans out of the planning process.
The House Republican bill will focus on police training, holding officers who are engaged in misconduct accountable and increasing the amount of law enforcement data that is publicly available.
Republicans in the Senate, led by Sen. Tim Scott, have also begun drafting legislation that will call for reforms, including the creation of an FBI system based on mandatory reporting of uses of force resulting in death or serious injury, and requiring states to provide data on the use of no-knock search warrants.
Pelosi told Time on Thursday said she believes this call for reform has been “more universally embraced” than previous efforts and added she hopes the Republican Party will support Democrats’ plans for change.
“If our Republican colleagues are oblivious to that, it will be to their peril,” she said.
She also advocated for involving police unions in plans for police reform, saying they “know that there’s some things that have to change and want to be part of that conversation.”
Reporting by Daniel Uria
United Press International is an international news agency whose newswires, photo, news film, and audio services provided news material to thousands of newspapers, magazines and radio and television stations for most of the 20th century.
Written by: United Press International
Congressional Black Caucus George Floyd Justice in Policing Act of 2020 Kevin McCarthy Nancy Pelosi national news Tim Scott U.S. News
Heartland Media Group of Central Illinois & Eastern Missouri
107 W. State Street PO Box 149
Nokomis, IL 62075
Tel:Â (866) 420-7790
Newsletter Signup
Download Our App
Submit News
Contact Us
Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
Revolution Radio
Home For The Holidays Radio
Deadlines
News and sports submissions: 11 p.m. Central
Advertising, legals, obituaries: 5 p.m. Central
Publication times
Late breaking news as it happens
Normal publication: 11 p.m. Central daily
Other news: Published as it’s made available
Post comments (0)