WASHINGTON — A dry policy debate over bipartisan policing legislation exploded on Tuesday afternoon into a heated and personal clash among three Democratic senators, offering a rare glimpse of the internal fight in their party over how to take on President Donald Trump.
The spectacle started in the least dramatic way possible: Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., a former attorney general and federal prosecutor, asked for unanimous consent to pass a package of policing bills, including one to reauthorize support for mental health services for law enforcement officers, and another to make recruits eligible for funding for training programs.
It quickly went off the rails when Sen. Cory Booker, the progressive New Jersey Democrat, rose to object, accusing Cortez Masto of being “complicit” with an authoritarian president.
Things got personal and nasty after Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, a longtime rival to Booker who also ran for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination and a cosponsor of some of the measures, noted that he failed to attend a key committee meeting where members debated the legislation and voted unanimously to move it to the Senate floor.
“Don’t question my integrity,” Booker shouted so loudly his voice could be heard outside the Senate chamber. “Don’t question my motives. I’m standing for Jersey, I’m standing for my police officers, I’m standing for the Constitution and I’m standing for what’s right. And dear God, if you want to come at me that way, you’re going to have to take it up with me. There’s too much on the line right now in America.”
Because the Justice Department was “weaponizing” public safety grants against states and cities that “resist the Trump policy agenda,” Booker said, Democrats should oppose the bills unless they added language to safeguard any law enforcement grants from politicization.
“This, to me, is the problem with Democrats in America right now,” Booker said. “We’re willing to be complicit with Donald Trump to let this pass through, when we have all the leverage right now there is.”
He added: “I say we stand, I say we fight, I say we reject this. When will we stand and fight this president? When are we going to stand up as a body and defend our work, defend our jurisdiction, defend this coequal branch of government?”