Washington: US President Joe Biden marks the anniversary of the police murder of George Floyd by hosting the African American man's family - but without being able to celebrate hoped-for national police reform. Floyd's daughter Gianna, his mother, sister and brothers will be among those attending private talks with Biden at the White House, Press Secretary Jen Psaki said.
"The courage and grace of his family, and especially his daughter Gianna, has really stuck with the president," she told reporters. "He's eager to listen to their perspectives." The choking to death of Floyd in Minneapolis on May 25 last year and subsequent conviction of the officer, Derek Chauvin, who'd knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes, were seen as seminal moments in the long US struggle for racial equality.
After the killing during Floyd's arrest outside a store, protests and riots erupted across a country already crackling with tension from the election battle between Biden and then president Donald Trump.
In the wake of the verdict this April against Chauvin, who faces sentencing next month, Biden sought to build on political momentum by urging Congress to pass a far-reaching police reform bill in time for the first anniversary. Americans must confront the "systemic racism" revealed by Floyd's killing "head on," he declared.
However, the ambitious deadline comes with only the House having passed the bill, known as the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, while the Senate continues to wrangle over key details. The bill seeks to reform what critics say have become ever more violent and unaccountable police forces around the country.
Opponents argue that police are being unfairly blamed when they are simply trying to operate in a dangerous and often heavily armed society. However, Biden and reform proponents say that a culture of impunity and underlying racism have made incidents like Floyd's death increasingly common.
Personal impact on Biden
Among other measures, the bill would ban potentially fatal restraint techniques used on suspects, like chokeholds. It would also end so-called "no-knock warrants," when police are authorized to burst into a suspect's house unannounced - a volatile situation that led to the accidental killing of a Black woman, Breonna Taylor, in Louisville, Kentucky, in March 2020.The most far-reaching of the measures that senators are still debating would be to end current legal protections that block civil lawsuits against police accused of misconduct.
Psaki put a brave face on chances of success, saying "the president is still very much hopeful that he will be able to sign the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act into law." While nothing is easy to get through the heavily divided Congress, Biden hopes that the energy unleashed in the wake of Floyd's death will "help move this legislation across the finish line."
Confirming that there's still hope for the bill, House Democrat Karen Bass, Senate Democrat Cory Booker and Republican senator Tim Scott issued a joint statement on Monday citing "progress." "This anniversary serves as a painful reminder of why we must make meaningful change. While we are still working through our differences on key issues, we continue to make progress toward a compromise and remain optimistic," they said. For Biden himself, hosting the Floyds for a "real conversation" will be a moving moment, Psaki said.
We must ensure that change happens – Labour leaders
On the 1st anniversary of the murder of George Floyd, the Labour Party reasserts its commitment to tackling racial injustice and ending structural racism in the UK. In a joint statement, Labour leader Keir Starmer, Shadow Justice Secretary David Lammy and Shadow Women & Equalities Secretary Marsha De Cordova pay tribute to the global movement sparked by the death of George Floyd.
The leaders highlight a series of campaigns which Labour will continue while in opposition, and changes the Party would bring forward in government. David Lammy said: “George Floyd looked like me, he could have been me. That’s why his death reverberated around the world. People said: none of us can breathe when we still face the issues of structural racism in our lives every day.”
Keir Starmer said: “These injustices have long scarred our society, but they have been brutally exposed by Covid. On the 25th of May 2020, not only did people see the violence on a street in Minneapolis but they could see the violence and destruction that structural racism was having on Black communities in their own societies as a result of the pandemic. We must ensure that change happens. And that is what the Labour Party is committed to.”