House Democrats split on police resolution vote

Summary

House Democrats split on a GOP police resolution as assaults on officers hit a 10-year high, according to the FBI.

Why this matters

The vote highlighted partisan divisions over crime, policing, and public safety messaging during National Police Week. It also came as lawmakers debated broader criminal justice policies ahead of the November elections.

House Democrats divided Wednesday on a Republican-authored resolution honoring law enforcement, with 29 Democrats joining all Republicans present in support and 173 Democrats voting against it.

Rep. Zach Nunn, R-Iowa, introduced the measure, which praised the “extraordinary sacrifice” of law enforcement officers and criticized calls to defund police. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., voted against it.

“We want to take that best practice of respecting law enforcement in Iowa to the nation’s capital, and I was thrilled that we got bipartisan support,” Nunn said in an interview with Fox News Digital.

Nunn said he had expected unanimous support. “I think it unfortunately puts a real spotlight on a chasm we have between those who support law and order and those who are supporting those who undermine it,” he said.

The vote came after assaults on law enforcement officers reached a 10-year high last year, according to an FBI report released Monday. The number of officers killed fell slightly between 2024 and 2025.

Some Democrats appeared to object to language in the resolution that criticized “leftist activists and progressive politicians” and said sanctuary city policies and efforts to “defund or dismantle local police departments undermine public safety and place both officers and the communities they serve at greater risk.”

The resolution also credited the Trump administration’s law-and-order policies with reducing violent crime, including what it described as the nation’s lowest homicide rate in more than a century last year.

“We are at a 125-year low for murder rates, 10-year low for drug overdoses,” Nunn told Fox News Digital. “These are things that good community policing, that our law enforcement officers are doing every day, have had a really positive impact.”

 

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