U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar is the first woman elected to represent the State of Minnesota in the United States Senate. Throughout her public service, Senator Klobuchar has always embraced the values she learned growing up in Minnesota. Her grandfather worked 1500 feet underground in the iron ore mines of Northern Minnesota. Her father, Jim, was a newspaperman, and her mother, Rose, was an elementary school teacher who continued teaching until she was 70.
Senator Klobuchar has built a reputation of putting partisanship aside to help strengthen the economy and support families, workers, and businesses. In 2019, an analysis by Vanderbilt University ranked her as the “most effective” Democratic senator in the 115th Congress.
Before I was elected to the Senate, I served for eight years as the chief prosecutor for Hennepin County, which includes Minneapolis and 45 suburbs. I know firsthand the vital role that law enforcement and public safety officers provide in keeping our citizens safe and that our criminal justice system cannot lose sight of the principles of fairness, compassion, and equality under the law. We must continue to address the systemic issues in policing and criminal justice that have gone unaddressed for too long.
In recent years, especially since 9/11, we have placed ever greater responsibilities on our police officers, firefighters, and first responders, who have been expected to significantly expand their abilities to respond to crises—while public safety budgets have been stretched increasingly thin, and even more so during the coronavirus pandemic. We must ensure that local, state, and federal first responders have the resources they need to purchase vital equipment, train law enforcement personnel, and acquire information systems to coordinate communications among first responders and various criminal justice agencies. As a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, I believe we owe it to our public safety officers to make sure they have the technologies, tools, and training they need to do their job safely and effectively.
Ensuring that our law enforcement officials have the resources needed to do their work is a critical part of combating the rise in domestic terrorism that our country has seen in recent years. The January 6th attack on our nation’s Capitol made clear that domestic extremist groups represent an urgent threat that federal, state, and local law enforcement must prioritize. As Chair of the Senate Rules Committee, I am now leading a bipartisan effort to find out what happened in the lead-up to and during the attack so that we make necessary public safety changes.
At the same time, our criminal justice system must administer justice fairly. Last year, in the wake of the murder of George Floyd, I worked with Senate colleagues to introduce the Justice in Policing Act, which holds officers accountable for misconduct, increases transparency in policing practices, and improves police conduct and training.
I have also long supported reforms to help ensure that our justice system works for everyone. That means making needed reforms to our sentencing laws and prisons, decreasing the number of non-violent drug offenders in our prisons by expanding access to home confinement and compassionate release programs for those who are now incarcerated, and supporting programs, like drug courts, that help keep non-violent offenders out of prison and are one of the most effective ways to reduce recidivism while providing access to treatment.
As Minnesota’s U.S. senator, I will continue to focus on these priorities:
As Minnesota’s U.S. senator, I’ve been fighting to strengthen our commitment to public safety: