Demings fires back at acting DHS secretary: ‘Systemic racism is always the ghost in the room’
Rep. Val Demings (D-Fla.) said Sunday that “systemic racism is always the ghost in the room” after acting Department of Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf’s said that he doesn’t think there is a “systemic racism problem” in law enforcement.
The Florida Democrat, who has been mentioned as a possible running mate for presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, told “ host Martha Raddatz on ABC’s “This Week” that the country has to be “painfully honest.” She added that the U.S. has been “fighting systemic racism in this country for 400 years,” long before protests broke out over George Floyd’s death after a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck during an arrest.
Wolf earlier said on the show that a “systemic racism problem” does not exist among law enforcement, but he acknowledged that some officers “abuse their jobs” and need to be held accountable.
“While I heard what the secretary said, we have a lot of work to do,” she said. “And systemic racism is always the ghost in the room.”
JUST IN: Rep. Val Demings, a former police chief, responds to claim by acting DHS Secretary Chad Wolf that there’s no “systemic racism” in policing: “We know that we have been fighting systemic racism in this country for 400 years.” https://t.co/upDZ0WZ2lY pic.twitter.com/E53dIDwOOh
— This Week (@ThisWeekABC) June 7, 2020
Demings, a former Orlando Police Department chief, said she has found recent videos of law enforcement officers reacting to protesters “extremely troubling.” She called for legislation to back more officer oversight, training and the examination of use-of-force policies, hiring patterns and diversity within police departments.
The Florida representative said she is also requesting law enforcement agencies across the country to “not wait for the federal government to have to tell you what to do.”
“You see what’s going on, you know what’s right and what’s wrong, take a critical look at yourselves, do a deep dive, and begin to change policies on your own because there are some things that we need to happen right now, like banning neck restraints, for example,” Demings said.
Floyd’s death sparked demonstrations across the country that have continued into this week over police treatment of minority populations.
Video footage of several confrontations between officers and protesters have spread online, appearing to show law enforcement allegedly mistreating demonstrators.
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