FEATURED POST

Activists Call on President Biden to End the Federal Death Penalty Before Leaving Office

Image
A conversation with Death Penalty Action Co-founder and Executive Director Abe Bonowitz. Now that Joe Biden is a lame duck president, activists are holding him accountable to make good on his promise to end the federal death penalty during his remaining six months as president. Biden’s election campaign in 2020 had pledged to end the federal death penalty and incentivize the remaining 27 states that still allow executions to do the same. While he made history as the first president in the United States to openly oppose the death penalty, there has been no movement to actually end federal executions during his nearly four years in office.

USA | Democrats drop death penalty abolition from 2024 platform

It's the first time the party has not opposed the practice nationally since 2016 and the first time since 2004 that it has been omitted entirely.

The Democratic Party has omitted the death penalty from its national platform for the first time in 20 years, following back-to-back cycles of opposing the practice outright.

The news came on Aug. 19, when the delegates to the 2024 Democratic National Convention in Chicago voted to approve the new document, which is to guide the party’s electioneering for the next four years. 

A former plank from the 2020 platform that stated, “Democrats continue to support abolishing the death penalty,” has been omitted, along with an entire paragraph related to sentencing minimums and retroactive sentence reductions.

The death penalty retreat from the Democrats is seen as part of a general shift on criminal justice reform, meant to attract voters ahead of a contentious 2024 general election that could see a major shakeup in Congress and state legislatures. Democrats are currently projected to be in close battles for control of the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate, respectively, which could explain their rightward shift with just over two months left until Election Day.

Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris, who has opposed the death penalty in her past roles in California and in the Senate, did not mention capital punishment during her remarks at the Democratic National Convention—despite clarion calls from the camp of her Republican opponent, former President Donald Trump, to resume use of the federal death penalty.

President Joe Biden, who dropped his reelection campaign in July, has largely opposed the practice during his time in office. Attorney General Merrick Garland issued a federal moratorium on use of the death penalty in 2021, pending a review of the Justice Department’s “policies and procedures.”

In the three years since, there has been no indication as to the status of that review, even as Garland has made moves to resume federal executions. These include his defense of the capital sentence for Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, and a push this year for the death penalty in the federal case against Payton S. Gendron, who killed ten African Americans in a mass shooting in Buffalo, New York, in 2022.

Earlier this year, Rep. Adriano Espaillat—one of two known Black Catholics in Congress—noted the Biden White House has not been a vocal supporter of his Federal Death Penalty Abolition Act of 2023, which currently sits idle in committee.

“I wouldn’t say that the White House has been actively engaging people to support the bill,” Espaillat told HuffPost in May.

Even so, part of the 2024 platform shift on criminal justice is apparently due to promises kept. In 2022, the Biden administration eliminated crack-cocaine sentencing disparities dating back to the president’s own policy moves while serving in Congress. Last year, the U.S. Sentencing Commission recommended for the first time that federal sentence reductions be retroactive. (Both issues were in the 2020 Democratic platform plank that has been removed in the current cycle.)

However, insofar as the shift on the death penalty is a culmination of a general drift on criminal justice policy from the top down within the party, supporters of a “whole life,” womb-to-tomb ethic within its ranks say it’s time for a reality check.

“We progressed past the need for the death penalty in America long ago,” said Hayden Laye, development coordinator for Democrats for Life of America. “We continue to urge President Biden to commute the sentences of every single federal death row inmate to life in prison.”

Source: blackcatholicmessenger.orgath-penalty, Nate Tinner-Williams, August 27, 2024

_____________________________________________________________________








"One is absolutely sickened, not by the crimes that the wicked have committed,
but by the punishments that the good have inflicted."

— Oscar Wilde



Most Viewed (Last 7 Days)

20 Minutes to Death: Witness to the Last Execution in France

Kuwait | Six Executed, Female Convict Spared at Last Minute

Saudi regime achieves record executions number of opponents during first half of this year

Saudi Arabia | Execution caught on video

Activists Call on President Biden to End the Federal Death Penalty Before Leaving Office

India | Supreme Court mulls guidelines to address delays in execution of death row convicts

Idaho death row inmate Thomas Creech claims second execution attempt would violate Eighth Amendment

An art exhibit reckons with Alabama’s death penalty toll

In the Bible Belt, Christmas Isn’t Coming to Death Row

Frank Amado: The Actual Story