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Minneapolis city council has veto-proof majority to defund and dismantle police department

I never thought I’d see the day, but Democrats are officially now looking to dismantle the police and police departments in left wing cities. In Minneapolis, the city council (one member is woman beater Keith Ellison’s son) reportedly has enough votes for a veto-proof majority to defund and dismantle the Minneapolis department. These Democrat rioter defenders who want to dismantle the Minneapolis police will likely need some sort of public vote in order to actually follow through with it. The sad thing is, in a cesspool like Minneapolis, this could actually be passed with the voters of that city.

If you think this is only going to be limited to Minneapolis, you’d be wrong. If the demon Democrats succeed in something like this, expect this to start happening in all kinds of left wing cesspool cities and blue states all over the country.

Minneapolis city council has veto-proof majority to defund and dismantle police department
Minneapolis city council has veto-proof majority to defund and dismantle police department

Nine members of the Minneapolis City Council announced their support for de-funding the Minneapolis Police Department and replacing it with a community-based public safety model at a rally in Powderhorn Park Sunday afternoon.

At the end of the rally, the councilmembers and some community activists committed to ending the Minneapolis Police Department through the budget process. The group also announced its intention to engage every willing community member to ask what safety means to them and create a “new transformative model for cultivating safety.”
Minneapolis City Council President Lisa Bender, Council Vice President Andrea Jenkins, and Council Members Alondra Cano, Jeremiah Ellison, Steve Fletcher, Cam Gordon and Jeremy Schroeder joined activists from Black Visions Collective and Reclaim the Block for the announcement.

With the support of the nine councilmembers, they have created a veto-proof supermajority in support of disbanding the police department. However, to make significant changes to the department or funding for the department, they will likely need a public vote to change the charter.