In this column published by the Charlotte Observer, the Raleigh News & Observer and the Durham Herald-Sun, Associate Professor of Sociology Raj Ghoshal counters many of the assertions politicians are making about crime in the United States.
By Raj Ghoshal
I鈥檝e taught criminology courses for the last 14 years at three universities, including at 黑料不打烊 in North Carolina. I find both crime and popular misunderstandings of crime fascinating, so I tuned into the second day of the recent Republican National Convention in Milwaukee that focused on the theme of 鈥淢ake America Safe Again鈥 to check what politicians are telling us about crime.

What I saw left me dismayed, a reaction I鈥檓 confident nearly every criminologist would share. My core disappointment wasn鈥檛 about politics, but more basic: many of the factual claims made by speakers were so misleading that anyone who watched the convention would have emerged with less knowledge of crime than they had going in.
First, several speakers criticized a supposed crime boom, but the reality is nearly opposite: America is in the midst of a striking crime decline. that violent crime is now about half as common as during its peak in the 1990s, and property crime has fallen even more. It is likely that the last three years will each go into the as seeing some of the .
We should be celebrating and learning from this crime drop, but we can鈥檛 do so when politicians pretend it isn鈥檛 happening.
Second, speakers blamed immigrants for a wide range of crimes. But that immigrants commit crime less often than U.S.-born Americans, and American cities with the most unauthorized immigrants have crime trends . One high-quality study even found U.S.-born natives are more likely to be arrested for serious crimes than unauthorized immigrants.
Third, several RNC speakers portrayed the modern Republican Party as taking serious measures to fight crime, but none noted a concerning fact: whatever may have been true in the past, Republican politicians during the Trump era have repeatedly pushed ill-advised 鈥渟oft on crime鈥 policies.
As president, Trump sought to cut nearly from local police funding, perhaps in part because he disagreed with programs like body cameras and police-community engagement. He repeatedly the COPS program that gave cities millions to enhance connections between police departments and citizens 鈥 a goal of particular importance in the post-George Floyd era, as crime soars if residents come to distrust police.
Trump鈥檚 supporters in Congress recently voted to reduce funding to the , and succeeded in cutting used to pursue the country鈥檚 biggest tax cheats and corporate criminals. They have of any serious gun safety measures even as guns continue to be used in a majority of homicides. Trump-allied Republicans are currently pushing personnel and funding to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, which works to combat terrorism and gun crimes.
Despite its tough rhetoric, the 鈥漧aw-and-order鈥 party has taken a pronounced turn toward lawlessness in Trump era. Democrats haven鈥檛 been perfect, either, but they鈥檝e largely pursued the kind of balanced approach that criminologists support. That includes funding improvements in law enforcement that both and between police and citizens.
For anyone truly interested in continuing our country鈥檚 recent progress in reducing crime, tuning out false claims like those we heard from politicians in Milwaukee would be a wise first step.
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Views expressed in this column are the author鈥檚 own and not necessarily those of 黑料不打烊.