Exactly two years after George Floyd’s murder by a Minneapolis police officer, President Joe Biden issued an executive order Wednesday that his administration claims will “advance effective, accountable policing and strengthen public safety.”
The measure follows multiple attempts to pass criminal justice reform that were ultimately tanked by Republicans. For that reason, the order, which applies mostly to federal law enforcement agencies, is helpful but woefully insufficient, in my view.
Evidence suggests many Americans agree with me. A Gallup poll published Friday found half of Americans support “major changes” to policing, while another 39 percent say they support “minor changes.”
To me, that indicates Americans nationwide see reason for change — not just at the federal level but within the departments they encounter most often: local police. The executive order, however, can’t mandate change on the local level.
That said, here are the most significant things the order will accomplish.
A database of police misconduct
The executive order mandates that the Department of Justice create a database to track incidents of misconduct committed by federal law enforcement officers. The administration said this will include records like officer convictions, “terminations, de-certifications, civil judgments, resignations and retirements while under investigation for serious misconduct, and sustained complaints or records of disciplinary actions for serious misconduct.”
Notably, the order instructs the attorney general to assess whether and how the records in the database could be made public.








