Harris Makes Dramatic Shift on the Death Penalty

Vice President Kamala Harris has fought to end the death penalty since 2003—but suddenly, the Democratic presidential nominee’s campaign has gone mum on the issue.Missouri’s decision to execute Marcellus Williams late Tuesday, despite the pleas from his victim’s family and the prosecutors in his case, as well as hundreds of thousands of petition signatures sent to the governor’s office calling for a commuted sentence, brought the issue back to the foreground. But despite mounting pressure, Harris’s campaign wouldn’t respond to direct questions about her current stance on human euthanization, reported Axios.That’s a far cry from where she’s stood on the issue over the years. In her inaugural address as San Francisco’s district attorney, Harris promised to “never charge the death penalty.” She kept that promise through her time as a prosecutor—all the way through 2019, during her first run for the White House, when she included the liberal policy as part of her core agenda, promising an end to capital punishment in her criminal reform plan. “Kamala believes the death penalty is immoral, discriminatory, ineffective and a gross misuse of taxpayer dollars,” her campaign website read at the time.Harris’s sudden retreat from the historically liberal policy aligns with the Democratic Party’s latest stance on capital punishment—which is, apparently, that it is no longer a topic for discussion. In August, the nation’s liberal party dropped its anti–death penalty stance from its platform, marking the first time since 2004 that the DNC has failed to address the death penalty, reported HuffPost.Meanwhile, the Trump campaign has gone all in on the death penalty, advocating to expand the extreme punishment to people convicted of relatively minor crimes, such as dealing drugs. During his time in office, Donald Trump executed more people than any administration in 120 years, according to the ACLU. His obsession with capital punishment goes back to his early days as a New York City real estate developer, when he personally paid out $85,000 for full-page ads in four local papers calling for the execution of the Central Park Five—a group of teenagers who were accused of raping Trisha Meili but who were later exonerated after serial rapist Matias Reyes confessed to the crime a decade later.“I want to hate these murderers and I always will,” Trump wrote in the May 1989 ad. “I am not looking to psychoanalyze or understand them, I am looking to punish them.”“Bring back the death penalty and bring back our police!” he wrote in all caps.

Sep 25, 2024 - 21:00
Harris Makes Dramatic Shift on the Death Penalty

Vice President Kamala Harris has fought to end the death penalty since 2003—but suddenly, the Democratic presidential nominee’s campaign has gone mum on the issue.

Missouri’s decision to execute Marcellus Williams late Tuesday, despite the pleas from his victim’s family and the prosecutors in his case, as well as hundreds of thousands of petition signatures sent to the governor’s office calling for a commuted sentence, brought the issue back to the foreground. But despite mounting pressure, Harris’s campaign wouldn’t respond to direct questions about her current stance on human euthanization, reported Axios.

That’s a far cry from where she’s stood on the issue over the years. In her inaugural address as San Francisco’s district attorney, Harris promised to “never charge the death penalty.” She kept that promise through her time as a prosecutor—all the way through 2019, during her first run for the White House, when she included the liberal policy as part of her core agenda, promising an end to capital punishment in her criminal reform plan.

“Kamala believes the death penalty is immoral, discriminatory, ineffective and a gross misuse of taxpayer dollars,” her campaign website read at the time.

Harris’s sudden retreat from the historically liberal policy aligns with the Democratic Party’s latest stance on capital punishment—which is, apparently, that it is no longer a topic for discussion. In August, the nation’s liberal party dropped its anti–death penalty stance from its platform, marking the first time since 2004 that the DNC has failed to address the death penalty, reported HuffPost.

Meanwhile, the Trump campaign has gone all in on the death penalty, advocating to expand the extreme punishment to people convicted of relatively minor crimes, such as dealing drugs. During his time in office, Donald Trump executed more people than any administration in 120 years, according to the ACLU.

His obsession with capital punishment goes back to his early days as a New York City real estate developer, when he personally paid out $85,000 for full-page ads in four local papers calling for the execution of the Central Park Five—a group of teenagers who were accused of raping Trisha Meili but who were later exonerated after serial rapist Matias Reyes confessed to the crime a decade later.

“I want to hate these murderers and I always will,” Trump wrote in the May 1989 ad. “I am not looking to psychoanalyze or understand them, I am looking to punish them.”

“Bring back the death penalty and bring back our police!” he wrote in all caps.