President Trump is working with Republican congressional leaders on a comprehensive crime bill, legislation that will put his popular crime-fighting agenda in front of voters ahead of the midterm elections next year. Here’s what you need to know about Trump’s crime legislation push:
The congressional collaboration announcement
Trump reveals legislative effort with GOP leaders:
- “Speaker Mike Johnson, and Leader John Thune, are working with me, and other Republicans, on a Comprehensive Crime Bill,” Trump said Tuesday on social media
- Added that it is what the “country needs, and NOW More to follow. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!!!”
- Legislation will put his popular crime-fighting agenda in front of voters ahead of midterm elections next year
- Represents major legislative push on crime issues with Republican lawmakers
The historical crime bill context
Current effort follows decades-old precedent:
- Congress last passed crime bill in 1994 when Bill Clinton was president
- It was considered largest crime bill in U.S. history and funded 100,000 new law enforcement officers
- Spent $9.7 billion on prisons during Clinton administration
- Trump’s proposal would be first comprehensive federal crime legislation in three decades
The executive order actions
Trump has already implemented crime-fighting measures through executive authority:
- Trump signed executive order Monday threatening to pull federal support from District of Columbia and other jurisdictions that refuse to end their cashless bail policies
- Said federal funds, services or approvals can be withheld if local leaders don’t comply
- Another executive order said federal grants and contracts for cities and states with cashless bail policies could be canceled
- Orders designed to pressure local governments to change criminal justice policies
The National Guard deployment
Military resources enlisted for domestic crime fighting:
- Trump ordered National Guard to prepare for rapid deployment to fight crime across country
- Enlisted more federal agencies to join his crime-fighting effort, including Department of Housing and Urban Development and Department of Transportation
- Trump has made fighting violent crime around U.S., particularly in nation’s capital, top priority this year
- Including deploying National Guard to help immigration sweeps in Los Angeles and support police in District of Columbia
The crime emergency declaration
D.C. serves as model for national approach:
- Measures were designed to tackle “crime emergency” that Trump declared Aug. 11 in nation’s capital
- He has since said effort could be needed in other cities
- D.C. deployment includes both immigration enforcement and police support functions
- Emergency declaration provides legal framework for federal intervention
The data dispute
Conflicting claims over crime statistics accuracy:
- Critics have countered that violent crime is down in District and other cities from spikes during COVID-19 pandemic
- But Trump accused cities of manipulating data to lower crime rates
- Justice Department is investigating District’s crime statistics
- Debate over actual crime levels versus reported statistics creates political tension
Read more:
• Donald Trump working on crime bill with Congress
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