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Crime Policy of the Democratic Party By Steve Hoenisch Last updated on July 29, 2004 Copyright 1996-2008 www.Criticism.Com This essay appears in The Encyclopedia of the American Democratic and Republican Parties, published by the International Encyclopedia Society. The encyclopedia won the Choice Outstanding Academic Book Award in 1997. Table of Contents 1 Policy Goes Federal 2 Fundamental Tenets of the Liberal Position 3 Democrats Called "Soft on Crime" 4 Republicans Undermine Rational Policies 5 Bibliography 6 Related 6.1 Democratic Party 6.2 Republican Party 7 Bestselling Books on the Democratic Party 1 Policy Goes FederalUntil the dawn of the 20th century and the social problems
that accompanied urbanization and industrialization, crime policy
was often viewed as properly belonging to state and local
authorities. The U.S. Constitution, combined with a tradition of
federalism, reserved police powers for the states, and both the
federal and state governments were satisfied to keep it that way,
at least until the 20th century. Before the 1900s, most of the
federal government's forays into crime policy involved regulating
interstate commerce and the railroads, protecting the mails,
combatting counterfeiting, and conducting such moral purity
crusades as those against pornography and lotteries. With the
Sherman Antitrust Act in the late 1800s, Congress struck out
against monopolies.
After the turn of the century, Congress increasingly turned to
passing legislation to solve a growing crime problem. And while
many Democrats played important roles in moving anticrime
legislation through Congress, several stand out as key players as
the war against crime unfolded. Democratic President Franklin D.
Roosevelt launched a war on crime as part of his New Deal. During
Roosevelt's administration, Democratic Representative Hatton W.
Sumners of Texas, the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee,
helped guide anticrime legislation through Congress. In
subsequent years, conservative Southern Democrats often led the
fight in Congress against crime. For instance, during the 1950s
and 1960s, Senator John L. McClellan, a conservative Democrat
from Arkansas, led a committee that produced several landmark
pieces of anticrime legislation. In the mid 1990s, Democratic
President Bill Clinton fought to bolster federal antiterrorism
laws in the wake of bombings at the World Trade Center and
Oklahoma City Federal Building.
Many of the battles among Democrats over anticrime legislation
took place not so much over the need for the acts but over to
whom -- state governments or local authorities -- federal funds
should be distributed, battles that frequently divided the
Democratic Party. Southern Conservative Democrats have tended to
favor allocating federal anticrime funds to state governments,
while their more Northern, liberal, and urban counterparts have
campaigned to give the money to city and other local
administrations. Members of the Democratic Party have also been
divided over such issues as broadening police powers and spending
on crime prevention versus repression, again with conservative
Southern Democrats taking a harder line than other elected
members of the party by favoring an expansion of search and
seizure laws and a focus on repressing crime.
In 1908, Republican President Theodore Roosevelt helped
increase the federal government's anticrime role by proposing the
creation of a Bureau of Investigation within the Department of
Justice. But recalling allegations that Roosevelt had misused the
Secret Service for his political ends and wary of the president's
motives, Congress rejected his proposal. The president reacted by
establishing the bureau by executive order.
Then, in 1910, Congress passed a piece of landmark
legislation, the Mann Act, officially the White Slave-Trade Act,
prohibiting the transportation of women across state lines for
prostitution. A few years later, Congress passed the Webb-Kenyon
Act over Republican William H. Taft's veto. The act forbid the
use of interstate commerce for the movement of liquor into dry
states.
In 1914, the seeds of the drug war of the 1980s were planted
as Congress passed the Harrison Narcotics Act, which regulated
professionals dealing with narcotic drugs. Enforcement of the
legislation increasingly criminalized drug trafficking and the
use of narcotics, which in turn prompted still more legislation.
As the century moved on, crime increasingly moved into the
spotlight as a political issue, and the prohibition period
brought yet more attention to it. During the presidential
election of 1928, prohibition was a major point of contention
between Democratic candidate Alfred E. Smith and the Republican
nominee, Herbert Hoover, who went on to win the election and to
focus the nation's attention further on crime.
As part of his New Deal, Democratic President Franklin D.
Roosevelt's went on to expand Hoover's drive against criminals
into a war on crime. The president's attorney general, Homer S.
Cummings, teamed up with Democratic Representative Hatton W.
Sumners of Texas, the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee,
to push ten pieces of anticrime legislation through Congress,
with much of their enforcement responsibilities going to the FBI.
Although organized crime had certainly existed in American
before World War I, federal legislators had generally considered
the problem to be the province of state and local authorities.
But as organized crime increasingly pervaded the national
consciousness, Congress began to react -- first with anti
racketeering statues enacted in 1934 and 1946 and later with the
proceedings of the Senate Special Committee to Investigate
Organized Crime in Interstate Commerce, otherwise known as the
Kefauver Crime Committee after its chairman, Estes Kefauver, a
Tennessee Democrat. The committee, formed in 1950, also included
Democrats Lester C. Hunt of Wyoming and Herbert R. O'Conor of
Maryland.
During the second half of the 20th century, growing concern
over organized crime, drug abuse, and violent crime as well as
the advent of the civil rights movement brought a massive
increase in federal involvement in law and order issues. From
1957 through 1960, Senator John L. McClellan, a conservative
Democrat from Arkansas, ran the hearings of the Senate Select
Committee on Improper Activities in the Labor and Management
Field that was investigating labor-management racketeering --
meaning organized crime. The committee uncovered a close
relationship between members of the underworld and the heads of
several unions, most notably the Teamsters. The hearings
eventually led Robert F. Kennedy, Democratic President John F.
Kennedy's attorney general and the former chief counsel for the
McClellan labor racketeering hearings, to gain passage in the
early 1960s of several anticrime statues aimed at curbing the
gambling activities of the underworld. Robert Kennedy also led a
drive against racketeering.
In the mid-1960s, a dramatic shift in national attitude took
place: Crime began to be viewed as a national problem warranting
a national solution. In 1964, the Democratic Party's platform,
which for years had made little mention of crime, commented that
lawlessness must be eradicated.
The 1964 presidential campaign battle among Republican Senator
Barry Goldwater, Independent candidate George Wallace, and
Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson further brought crime into the
national spotlight as a policy issue. In reaction to Civil Rights
demonstrations and a rising crime rate, both Goldwater and
Wallace included a strong law and order plank in their campaigns,
with Goldwater often referring to the "crime in the streets."
Both accused Johnson of fostering a leniency that abetted crime.
In the conservative tradition, Goldwater and Wallace promised to
repress crime with a stricter enforcement of the criminal code.
Johnson responded not so much with a war on crime as a "War on
Poverty," hoping to reduce the crime rate by ameliorating what
such Democratic liberals as Johnson saw as its root cause.
Indeed, even by as early as the 1960s, the Democrats had focused
on attacking the root causes of crime. In fact, references to
such an approach appear as early as the 1940 Democratic Party
platform, when the party noted its work in clearing the slums
that, it said, were breeding grounds of crime.
2 Fundamental Tenets of the Liberal PositionThe difference between the approaches of how to resolve the
crime problem reveals the fundamental tenets of the conservative
and liberal positions. The conservative position -- including
that taken by many in a long line of Southern Democrats -- seeks
to resolve crime directly through repressing it. On the other
hand, the liberal position, often taken up by many Northern,
urban members of the Democratic Party, seeks to solve the crime
problem by alleviating what they see as its source: poverty,
discrimination, and inequality. The conservative position
emphasizes individual responsibility while the liberal view
centers on social welfare. Hence Johnson's Great Society
programs.
In 1967, as the next presidential election was
approaching, the crime issue remained alive, kept to the fore of
public and political consciousness by a high crime rate and
continuing racial tensions. In February, President Johnson
presented a detailed message to Congress on crime that included a
landmark proposal for the enactment of the Safe Streets and Crime
Control Act of 1967, one of the biggest pieces of federal
legislation yet proposed to help combat crime. The measure
proposed to implement a large-scale program of grants to cities
and other communities to aid their fight against crime.
The president's bill, however, encountered formidable
opposition in Congress, not only from Republicans but also from
Southern Democrats, both of which groups were becoming
increasingly disenchanted with Johnson's Great Society program
that, they believed, had made big promises but had fulfilled few
of them. The objection to the president's bill, though, was not
over the need for it, but over how the funds should be allocated.
Johnson's bill would distribute money to the cities; Republicans
and Southern Democrats wanted the grants delivered to the states.
In the wake of the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Martin
Luther King Jr. and amid rioting in such cities as Newark and
Detroit, a subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee held
hearings on the bill.
Meantime, as the debate over Johnson's proposal
continued into spring 1968, law and order again rose as a central
point of contention in the presidential election. Richard M.
Nixon, seeking the presidency for the Republican Party, employed
the issue in his campaign, as did Wallace, who was again running
for the presidency as an Independent candidate. Both Nixon and
Wallace argued that decisive action needed to be taken against
crime -- and that action meant enforcing the criminal laws more
forcefully. The voting public, having its attention further
focused on crime by the campaign messages of Nixon and Wallace,
waited to see what Congress would do with Johnson's proposal.
Despite the lack of enthusiasm among Republicans and,
perhaps more important, conservative Southern Democrats for the
administration's bill, the House Judiciary Committee reported out
a bill that, in accordance with the president's proposal,
provided direct grants to local authorities. The committee's
chairman, Democrat Emmanuel Celler, was instrumental in guiding
the bill through committee. Yet 12 of the 15 Republicans on the
Judiciary Committee lobbied strongly against the bill when it was
introduced to the floor, where met strong opposition not only
from House Republicans but also from conservative Southern
Democrats. The Southern Democrats joined the Republicans in
arguing that the bill would usurp states' rights and allow the
central government to dictate the law enforcement policies of
local authorities.
The Republicans counterattacked with an alternative
named the Cahill Amendment after its sponsor. It proposed
distributing block grants to state agencies rather than grants-in-aid to local authorities. Besides House Republicans and many
Southern Democrats, 47 of the 50 governors -- many of whom were
members of the Democratic Party -- supported the Cahill
Amendment. On the other hand, big city majors, again including
many Democrats, backed the administration's bill. Thus, a deeper
division arose within the Democratic party over the Safe Streets
and Crime Control Act. Democratic city majors as well as liberal,
Northern Democrats in the House held fast to the administration's
plan, while state governors and Southern Democrats generally
opposed it, favoring the Republicans' alternative instead.
A fault line had also developed within Johnson's
Democratic administration. The President's Crime Commission, for
one, did not strongly support grants to local authorities.
Rather, it identified lack of coordination as among the problems
of U.S. crime policy, which some interpreted as an endorsement of
the need to better include state governments in law enforcement.
Second, many other mid-level administration officials quietly
favored the Republicans' block grants approach.
These fractures within the Democratic Party, both
inside and outside the administration, helped influence the House
of Representatives to reject the administration's bill in favor
of a bill sanctioning a strong state role.
During this period, the Senate Judiciary Committee was
considering the administration's bill. The committee's chairman,
conservative Democrat John McClellan of Arkansas, frowned upon
Johnson's proposal, causing an early party fissure in the Senate.
Backed by three other Southern Democrats on the Judiciary
Committee, Democrat McClellan joined committee Republicans to
rewrite the administration's bill to emphasize a strong state
role in fighting crime. However, some of the more liberal Senate
Democrats, arguing that the revised bill was anti-city, obtained
a compromise stipulating that states had to funnel percentages of
the grants to local government units. In the end, like in the
House, Southern Democrats joined forces with Republicans to rout
the administration's bill and substitute a state-oriented version
for it.
Over the objections of some liberal Democrats,
President Johnson reluctantly signed the Omnibus Crime Control
and Safe Streets Act of 1968 into law, saying that it contained
"more good than bad." The act, which included the establishment
of the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration, was a victory
for critics of the Great Society, including some conservative
Southern Democrats. The enforcement administration survived into
the 1980s, when battles over the federal budget led to its
demise. The act also included gun control provisions initially
proposed by Johnson, though they had been weakened by Republicans
during their revision of the bill. In the act, conservative
Democrat McClellan succeeded in winning expanded authority for
wiretapping without warrants, despite objections from his fellow,
albeit more liberal, Democrats, including President Johnson.
3 Democrats Called "Soft on Crime" In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the administration
of Republican President Richard Nixon continued the full-on
attack against crime begun by Johnson -- but with an emphasis on
law and order. Nixon's policy, however, came under attack,
largely from liberals, who saw Nixon's law and order campaign as
attempts to put down civil rights activists and antiwar
demonstrators. President Nixon, on the other hand, used the
rising public sentiment that criminals were out of control and
city streets unsafe to assail members of the Democrat Party as
being "soft on crime."
Yet during the Nixon administration, several pieces of
anticrime legislation became law, including the landmark
Organized Crime Control Act of 1970. Sponsored by Senator
McClellan, the conservative Southern Democrat from Arkansas, and
Senator Samuel J. Ervin, a conservative Democrat from North
Carolina, the act included Title IX, the Racketeer Influenced and
Corrupt Organizations statue, which helped launch a concerted
drive against organized crime. The statue established severe
criminal and civil penalties for using racketeering money or
procedures in authentic businesses. But it also led to numerous
civil lawsuits, which in turn prompted Congress to review the
statue.
In 1970, President Nixon also helped encourage passage
of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse and Control Act, which reinforced
narcotics penalties. Yet the act did not stop the issue of drug
abuse from reappearing in nearly every election year thereafter;
the issue eventually culminated during the 1980s in conservative
Ronald Reagan's "war on drugs" and, later, with passage of the
1988 Anti-Drug Abuse Act, which further increased penalties for
both users and dealers, established a cabinet-level drug czar,
and set aside additional federal funds to fight drugs.
But Nixon's criticism of the Democrats as soft on crime
and his anticrime crusade soon ended, as he found himself accused
of perpetuating criminal acts as part of the Watergate affair and
several of his high-ranking administration officials -- including
Republican Vice President Spiro Agnew and Attorney General John
N. Mitchell -- convicted of crimes.
The 1980 campaign of conservative Republican
presidential candidate Ronald Reagan revived the Republican
Party's law and order theme and reinvigorated crime as a national
political issue after it had flagged slightly during the latter
half of the 1970s. After being elected president, Reagan's
anticrime policies focused on repressing, rather than preventing,
crime, drawing wide-spread criticism from Democrats. During
Reagan's tenure, fighting crime translated into combatting drug
trafficking and abuse. He expanded the federal government's drug
interdiction effort while Nancy Reagan, the first lady, led a
"Just Say No" campaign that equated drug use with immorality. In
1986 Congress passed the Anti-Drug Abuse Act, which greatly
expanded Reagan's war against trafficking and abuse. Republican
President George Bush continued Reagan's antidrug drive among his
crime-fighting efforts.
4 Republicans Undermine Rational Policies
During the 1990s, crime has remained a dominant
political issue. Following the bombing of the World Trade Center
in New York City and the attack on the Federal Building in
Oklahoma City, President Bill Clinton, a moderate Democrat,
fought for a crime bill aimed at combatting terrorism. Clinton
also sought to address the crime problem with such crime-prevention proposals as the establishment of "drug courts" that
obtain treatment for addicts and midnight basketball leagues that
give teenagers an alternative to hanging out on city streets. The
programs have been popular with Democrats and backed by many
moderate Republicans. But not conservatives. In late 1994,
conservative Republicans, led by Representative Newt Gingrich of
Georgia, the Speaker of the House, tendered a plan to reduce
crime prevention spending by $5 billion, starting a conflict that
polarized Congress. Conservatives maintained that such spending
is wasteful, while the Democrats as well as Republican moderates
argued that spending money on crime prevention is cheaper than
building prisons. Yet the ultra-conservative Gingrich insisted
that crime prevention proposals were "pork."
The Grand Old Party's anticrime proposal of 1995
included a provision that would require violent criminals to
serve 85 percent of their prison terms. Such hardline policies as
determinate sentencing advocated by conservative Republicans have
not been without their costs, however, resulting in a U.S. prison
population proportionately larger than that of any other country.
Besides seeking to cut federal money for crime
prevention, conservatives in Congress, especially the authors of
the Contract with America, sought to alter President Clinton's
"community policing" drive to emphasize hiring more police
officers and buying more crime-fighting hardware.
But the Clinton administration resisted the attacks on
its crime policies. Attorney General Janet Reno, appointed by
President Clinton, has argued forcibly for the effectiveness of
community policing, adding that it has the overwhelming support
of the public. Other major points of contention over crime policy
during the mid 1990s included search and seizure rights and, as
always, the level of federal aid.
In 1995, after reports showed the overall level of
crime declining slightly for the third year in a row, President
Clinton set up a National Commission on Crime Control and
Prevention and charged it with developing a strategy for
controlling and preventing crime and violence.
As the presidential election of 1997 approaches, the
issue of crime -- whether it focuses on drug control, prison
sentences, or prevention -- promises to remain an issue of
paramount social importance that will continue to distinguish the
ideologies of the Republican Party from those of the Democratic
Party.
5 Bibliography
Bacon, Donald C.; Davidson, Roger H.; Keller, Morton; editors.
The Encyclopedia of the United States Congress, New York: Simon &
Schuster, 1995.
Barnes, Fred. "Dopey." The New Republic, May 23, 1988.
Feeley, Malcolm M. and Sarat, Austin D. The Policy Dilemma:
Federal Crime Policy and the Law Enforcement Assistance
Administration, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1980.
Harris, Richard. Justice: The Crisis of Law, Order, and
Freedom in America, New York: E. P. Dutton & Company, Inc., 1970.
Porter, Kirk H. and Johnson, Donald Bruce. National
Party Platforms: 1840-1964, Urbana, Ill.: University
of Illinois Press, 1966.
Tromanhauser, Edward D. The Shaping of Crime Policy, Chicago:
The Union Institute, 1990.
Gest, Ted. "Congress and Cops." U.S. News & World Report.
December 26, 1994.
6 Related
See The Nation magazine for clear-headed political commentary on current affairs and policy.
7 Bestselling Books on the Democratic Party
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