Biden Changes Mind! Decides To Side With Republicans Who Voted Against DC Crime Billl

On Thursday, President Biden said that he would support legislation that would partially overturn a crime law in the District of Columbia. When the president went to the Capitol on Thursday to meet with the caucus, he informed Senate Democrats that he intended not to veto the bill, according to several senators who attended the discussion.

The local measure would increase the requirement for jury trials in most minor cases, abolish most obligatory sentences, reduce punishments for a number of violent acts, such as carjacking and robberies, and lessen penalties for many violent offenses.

 

In a later tweet, Biden stated, “I favor D.C. Statehood and home rule, but I don’t support some of the changes D.C. Council put up against the Mayor’s objections, such as cutting punishments for carjackings. “I will sign it if the Senate votes to overturn what the D.C. Council did.”

Because of the potential effects on home rule, Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) supported a Biden veto of the GOP bill despite her opposition to the crime measure. It is clever politics. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told reporters on Thursday, “He was racing into a buzzsaw. “You don’t want to move to the left of the mayor of D.C.”

The GOP would have definitely exploited a veto in campaign advertisements to advance their argument that Democrats are too lenient on crime.

The D.C. City Council passed the measure with a unanimous majority, and in a resounding 12-1 vote, it overrode Bowser’s veto.

A resolution of disapproval that would prevent the law’s execution was passed by the GOP-controlled House. Notwithstanding the Democratic majority in the upper chamber and the Democratic Party’s customary support for D.C. home rule, it is likely to be approved by the Senate with bipartisan support in a vote as early as next week.

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), who stated that the local legislation doesn’t make sense to him, became the first Democratic senator to publicly support the resolution on Monday. He might vote with other Democrats next week who are also up for tough reelection battles in 2024.

After Biden’s announcement on Thursday, Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) declared that he was still debating the measure.

Democrats in other positions appeared uncertain as well, such as Sen. Tim Kaine (Va.), who told reporters to “speak to me next week.”

In this sense, it is a complex issue. The mayor was chosen by those who believed that this was the wrong course of action, and the City Council was chosen by those who believed that this was the correct course of action, he stated. “It indicates that they aren’t on the same page, Right. You must investigate it.

If another Democrat joins Manchin in backing the resolution to repeal the crime bill, it will pass the Senate as it has the support of all 49 Republican senators. D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D) told reporters that she was “extremely unhappy” with Biden’s stance because it was “news to me.”

 

 

 

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