Minnesota state lawmakers will get another chance at passing police accountability measures into law next week, with Gov. Tim Walz planning to call a special legislative session for the second time this summer.
Walz said Tuesday he is optimistic that lawmakers can strike a deal on both a public works spending package and on police reforms in the wake of the May death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police officers.
But the politics remain tricky. A few hours after Walz revealed his plan to call a special session this coming Monday, members of the Legislature's People of Color and Indigenous Caucus — joined at a statehouse news conference by Democratic U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar — said that GOP legislative leaders have not been communicating with them about police accountability proposals.
"Until we get that meaningful dialogue, I'm not sure how we can get things done," said Sen. Jeff Hayden, DFL-Minneapolis.
A special session last month ended in acrimony as Democrats who control the House and the Republican-led Senate hit an impasse over a series of measures meant to increase police accountability in response to Floyd's killing.
"The Senate GOP supports police reforms like banning chokeholds and de-escalation training. However, we won't support any DFL 'reforms' that defund or dismantle the police," Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, R-East Gull Lake, tweeted on Tuesday in response to the DFL claims.
House Democrats continue to push for a sweeping package of changes to boost community-led alternatives to policing, ban warrior-style training for officers and raise the threshold for using deadly force from "apparent" to "imminent" threats to officers and others.
As noted by Gazelka, Republicans supported a handful of those measures, including raising training standards and requiring officers to intervene if colleagues use excessive force. But Democrats said they didn't go far enough.