After facing protests from black activists, Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders unveiled a comprehensive racial and criminal justice plan Monday.
Sanders, who has often spoken about running a police department as mayor of Burlington, promises to “reinvent how we police America” and packaged his criminal justice plan with proposals to preserve voting rights and protect against racial violence.
That means overhauling the way police are trained to downplay the use of force and emphasize community policing. Police officers would also be required to wear body cameras, paid for by the federal government.
The senator also calls for demilitarizing police forces, “so they don’t look and act like invading armies.” And he proposes including a wide swatch of community leaders in re-imagining police forces, including leaders from the Black Lives Matter movement.
Related: Bernie Sanders event shut down by Black Lives Matter activists
“It is an outrage that in these early years of the 21st century we are seeing intolerable acts of violence being perpetuated by police,” Sanders said in a fact sheet released by his campaign. “We need a societal transformation to make it clear that black lives matter, and racism cannot be accepted in a civilized country.”
The senator has a long record working in the civil rights movement. But he hails from a state whose population is barely more than 1% black, and has struggled to connect to African-American voters, a key voting block in the Democratic Party.
But he’s stepped up efforts since Black Lives Matters activists interrupted his speech at the liberal Netroots Nation conference in Phoenix in late July. He was the only major presidential candidate to speak to the annual conference of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Louisiana last month, and recently hired a racial justice activist as his new press secretary.
Even so, his speech to a Social Security rally in Seattle Saturday was shutdown by activists with the Black Lives Matter movement, who said they need to hold Sanders accountable.
Sanders’ plan also goes after what he calls the “failed ‘War on Drugs,’” condemning “racially-biased mandatory minimums that punish people of color unfairly.”








