By David Morgan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Republican-led U.S. Senate and Democratic-led House of Representatives will vote this week on separate bills aimed at addressing police misconduct following George Floyd’s death in police custody, but neither measure is likely to become law.
The Senate is expected to hold a procedural vote on a Republican bill by Wednesday, while the House is due to vote on more sweeping Democratic legislation on Thursday.
Nearly a month after Floyd’s death in Minneapolis with a police officer’s knee on his neck that set off weeks of protests, neither measure, as written, appears to have enough bipartisan support to win approval from both chambers and be signed into law by Republican President Donald Trump.
With strong public sentiment for stopping excessive force by police, especially against African-Americans, many are urging Congress to seize the opportunity to quickly pass legislation.
Last week Trump signed an executive order aimed at guiding police reforms https://www.reuters.com/article/us-minneapolis-police-congress-legislati/factbox-whats-the-difference-between-three-u-s-plans-for-police-reform-idUSKBN23O3KW.
Some hope a bipartisan alternative can emerge by amending the Senate measure or by reconciling the bills through negotiation.
Democrats have largely denounced the Senate Republican bill, saying it relies heavily on incentives to encourage police reforms rather than mandating changes in law and policy, as the Democratic bill does. Some Senate Republicans also are seeking tougher provisions.
“This is a national problem of police violence that we have. It requires a national solution. And the only way to bring that about is with a strong piece of federal legislation,” Representative Hakeem Jeffries, who leads the House Democratic Conference and helped write the Democratic bill, told MSNBC on Monday.
Republicans regard the Democratic measure as a “poison pill,” partly because it would allow misconduct victims to sue police, which critics say would have a chilling effect on law enforcement.
(Reporting by David Morgan and Lisa Lambert; editing by Grant McCool)