The top Republican in the Minnesota Legislature said Friday that lawmakers meeting in a special session next week should not act too quickly on reforms in the aftermath of George Floyd's death in police custody.
"I do believe more work can be done. But to actually expect that to be done in the next week is not how the legislative bodies work," said Senate Majority Leader Paul Gazelka, R-East Gull Lake. "We meet in committees and we fully vet issues to make sure we get it right. Because it's not just for now, this is for a generation to come."
Gazelka's comments follow calls by Gov. Tim Walz and DFL leaders pressing for swift action on measures to curb police abuses. Floyd died on Memorial Day after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes during an arrest.
Gazelka's suggestion of a drawn-out legislative response is "completely dismissive of the urgency to protect the black community" and shows why large-scale criminal justice legislation hasn't happened in the past, Senate Minority Leader Susan Kent, DFL-Woodbury, said in a statement Friday.
Walz said Wednesday that legislators' commitment to police reforms will be on display next week when they convene in St. Paul for a special session triggered by an extension of Walz's emergency powers to combat the COVID-19 pandemic. "I will guarantee you, there will be bills put on the floor and put to a vote. Yes or no. Put your money where your mouth is and send it forward," Walz said.
Lawmakers also are expected to take up a bonding bill to fund major infrastructure projects around the state. Minneapolis and St. Paul are seeking state money to help rebuild from the destruction of the violent protests that followed Floyd's death.
House Republicans blocked a $2 billion bonding bill at the end of the regular session last month in an effort to end Walz's emergency powers. Now a group of DFL legislators has threatened to withhold their votes as well unless they gain significant changes to law enforcement practices.
Earlier this week, members of the Legislature's People of Color and Indigenous Caucus and DFL House Speaker Melissa Hortman suggested about two dozen policy changes, including increasing oversight of officer licensure and training, expanding de-escalation training, creating incentives for officers to live in the communities where they work, and moving prosecution of officer-involved deaths to the Attorney General's Office — as has been done in Floyd's case.