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Obama slammed by the Left after criticising ‘defund the police’ slogan

Barack Obama has landed in controversy with progressives in his own party after commenting on an element of the Black Lives Matter movement.

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Barack Obama has sparked outrage from the progressive wing of his own party after criticising Black Lives Matter’s “defund the police” slogan.

The former president made the comments in an interview with host Peter Hamby for his Snapchat show Good Luck America released on Wednesday, where he warned Democrats risked losing voters by using “snappy” slogans like “defund the police”.

“You lost a big audience the minute you say it, which makes it a lot less likely that you’re actually going to get the changes you want done,” Mr Obama said in the interview, first reported by Axios.

“The key is deciding, do you want to actually get something done, or do you want to feel good among the people you already agree with?”

Progressive Democrats, including a group known as “The Squad”, immediately hit back at Mr Obama. “We lose people in the hands of police,” tweeted Minnesota Congresswoman Ilhan Omar.

“It’s not a slogan but a policy demand. And centring the demand for equitable investments and budgets for communities across the country gets us progress and safety.”

Massachusetts Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley wrote, “The murders of generations of unarmed black folks by police have been horrific. Lives are at stake daily so I’m out of patience with critiques of the language of activists. Whatever a grieving family says is their truth. And I’ll never stop fighting for their justice and healing.”

New York Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, in a series of tweets, said activists were not “PR firms for politicians” and it wasn’t until “they said ‘defund’ that comfortable people started paying attention to brutality”.

“The whole point of protesting is to make people uncomfortable,” she said.

“The thing that critics of activists don’t get is that they tried playing the ‘polite language’ policy game and all it did was make them easier to ignore. Activists take that discomfort with the status quo and advocate for concrete policy changes.

“Popular support often starts small and grows. To folks who complain protest demands make others uncomfortable … that’s the point.”

Missouri Congresswoman-elect Cori Bush, a Black Lives Matter activist who defeated long-time incumbent Lacy Clay in the Democratic primary this year, said “let’s talk about losing people”.

“We lost Michael Brown Jr. We lost Breonna Taylor. We’re losing our loved ones to police violence. It’s not a slogan. It’s a mandate for keeping our people alive. Defund the police,” she wrote.

“Defund the police” became a popular rallying cry amid the widespread rioting, looting and arson that gripped the US in the months after the May 25 death of George Floyd during an arrest in Minneapolis.

Hundreds of riots resulted in an estimated $US2 billion ($A2.7 billion) in property damage and dozens of deaths, although researchers found 93 per cent of the protests were “overwhelmingly peaceful”.

Minneapolis became ground zero for the “defund the police” movement, with its council voting in June to defund and dismantle the MPD and create a new “Community Safety and Violence Prevention department”.

While the proposal has been effectively shelved until next year, the city is grappling with a disturbing increase in violent crime – including a 537 per cent increase in car-jackings compared with last November.

Other senior Democrats have made similar comments to Mr Obama, including House Majority Whip James Clyburn, who said in an interview with CBS News last month that “defund the police” was “killing our party, and we’ve got to stop it”.

He warned it may have cost them some candidates including South Carolina Congressman Joe Cunningham, who lost to Republican Nancy Mace. Mr Clyburn said he had discussed the issue with late civil rights icon John Lewis, the Georgia Congressman who died in September.

“We sat together on the House floor and talked about how that slogan … could undermine the BLM movement, just as ‘burn, baby, burn’ destroyed our movement back in the ’60s,” he said.

frank.chung@news.com.au

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Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/world/north-america/us-politics/obama-slammed-by-the-left-after-criticising-defund-the-police-slogan/news-story/b96d7b30223116dbd4109a20254d057a