Since former police officer Derek Chauvin’s conviction for the murder of George Floyd, there’s been a considerable increase in bipartisan discussions in Congress focused on criminal justice reform. President Joe Biden is expected to highlight this very topic Wednesday in his first address to a joint session of Congress.
These conservative lawmakers have greatly benefited from the current system, hence they have a vested interest in not significantly changing it.
But here’s the blunt reality: How can Democrats find common ground on meaningful criminal justice reform when the GOP, from its leaders in Congress to the rank and file, denies systemic racism exists?
On Sunday, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., stated on Fox News that systemic racism does not exist because — wait for it — America elected Barack Obama as president and Kamala Harris as vice president. Graham knows as a lawyer, and as someone presumably with common sense, that there is no connection between how Americans voted and the real-world racially disparate impact of our criminal justice system. But he and other leading Republicans continue to deny this reality.
When it comes down to it, these conservative lawmakers have greatly benefited from the current system, hence they have a vested interest in not significantly changing it. It’s the zero-sum mentality at work, where some on the right view any progress for people of color as a threat to diminish their own power.
The lone Black Republican in the United States Senate, Sen. Tim Scott, of South Carolina, has candidly spoken of being mistreated by the police in the past, including being pulled over seven times in one year. Yet just last month on Fox News, he jaw-droppingly declared, “Woke supremacy is as bad as white supremacy.”
In June, Scott, who is the GOP Senate’s point person in the current criminal justice reform discussions, even refused to admit systemic racism in law enforcement existed, instead deflecting by telling CBS’ “Face the Nation,” “Most of us don’t really understand the definition of systemic racism.”
It’s not just the GOP elite who refuse to admit our criminal justice system has a systemic problem; the GOP rank and file appear to agree as well.
Ironically, Scott’s own accounts of past experiences of being pulled over by the police as a Black man “for nothing more than driving a new car in the wrong neighborhood,” as he put it, are glaring examples of the very thing he claims he doesn’t understand the definition of.
Systemic racism in our criminal justice system simply means we repeatedly see “racially disparate outcomes, regardless of the intentions of the people who work within them,” as The Washington Post reported. This racial disparity is well documented and permeates all aspects of our criminal justice system, from Black people being 20 percent more likely than white people to be pulled over by the police to Black people receiving higher bail amounts to Black people receiving longer prison sentences than whites in the same circumstances.
The most egregious disparity, which feels painfully apparent in the aftermath of the Chauvin trial, is that Black people are three times more likely to be killed by the police than whites. This is not about a “few bad apples”; it’s about the entire garden being infected.
It’s not just the GOP elite, however, who refuse to admit our criminal justice system has a systemic problem; the GOP rank and file appear to agree as well. A poll released in October by the nonpartisan Public Religion Research Institute found that 56 percent of Americans believe the killing of Black Americans by police “are part of a broader pattern of how police treat Black Americans.” But among Republicans polled, nearly 80 percent said the killings of people like George Floyd are “isolated incidents.”








