In a recent compelling commentary in the New York Times, Ezra Klein described the dangers when politics becomes "an aesthetic" or "performative."
Under performance politics, removing disfavored names from buildings becomes more important than closing the achievement gap. Voters reward big promises on affordable housing as the problem only worsens. Meanwhile, the foundations of good government needed to deliver on progressive policies — transparency, accountability, efficiency — continue to wither.
Sadly the cancer of performative politics — to be clear, a disease even more advanced on the right — has reached a crisis level in Minneapolis. Most observers will frame the November 2021 Minneapolis elections as a referendum on the "far left" or "progressives." This would be a mistake.
Quoting from Ibram Kendi's book "How to be an Anti-Racist," Klein stresses that it is the fundamental outcome not the consciousness or good intent of the policymaker that matters. The truth is that actual outcomes in Minneapolis too often have not been progressive. Nonetheless, voters continue to reward performers not reformers.
No issue demonstrates the folly of politics as performance art more starkly than the reckless call to abolish and defund the Minneapolis Police Department. While no productive outcome-based conversation has occurred in Minneapolis since the death of George Floyd, St. Paul has engaged the Citizens' League and a dynamic group of citizens to propose practical responses. Meanwhile, the authors of the charter change to abolish the MPD failed to meet basic timelines in submitting their proposal to the Charter Commission in 2020.
The notion floated by many policymakers that the police culture in Minneapolis is irredeemably toxic and incapable of change is offensive to me personally and professionally. I have worked with law enforcement as an elected official and as a prosecutor throughout my career. Like most of us, law enforcement officers enter into their profession for the right reasons — in their case, to protect and to serve. More than perhaps any other profession, however, law enforcement officers are undermined when those with the power to hold wrongdoers accountable fail to do their job.
The truth is that the elected officials in Minneapolis have failed to produce and require an effective disciplinary program in the MPD. This is not because of limitations on their authority in the city charter. It is not primarily because of the arbitration system. To the extent it is the union contract, these are contracts the council ultimately approves.
This is the very dangerous "big lie" behind the charter proposal: