Reason Roundup

Klobuchar's Tough-on-Crime Past Finally Comes Back to Bite Her

Plus: South Carolina primary tallies, coronavirus claims two lives in Washington state, and more...

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Klobuchar's prosecutorial past comes back to bite her (finally). But first: It's Biden vs. Bernie again ahead of tomorrow's Super Tuesday primaries. Former Vice President Biden took nearly half (48 percent) of the Democratic presidential primary votes in South Carolina, with Sen. Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.) earning 20 percent and former South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg getting just 8 percent.

Buttigieg dropped out of the race on Sunday. Businessman Tom Steyer also ended his campaign over the weekend, after getting just 11 percent of the South Carolina vote.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) placed fifth in South Carolina, with just 7 percent of the vote, trailed by Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D–Minn.) with 3 percent and Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D–Hawaii) with 1 percent. Former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg wasn't on the ballot.

Both Bloomberg and Klobuchar faced protests over the weekend, forcing Klobuchar to cancel her Sunday night campaign rally at a high school in Minnesota's St. Louis Park.

Black Lives Matter protesters were there to call out Klobuchar for the incarceration of Myon Burrell, who as a 16-year-old was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison. Burrell maintains his innocence, and evidence suggests he may have been wrongfully convicted in the death of 11-year-old Tyesha Edwards, who was killed by a stray bullet in 2002.

(Jack Kurtz/ZUMA Press/Newscom)

"Sen. Klobuchar was the county attorney during Burrell's first trial," notes WCCO. And while campaigning for president, Klobuchar has repeatedly cited the story of how she helped put Burrell away.

(Jack Kurtz/ZUMA Press/Newscom)

The Klobuchar campaign released a statement saying that "the campaign offered a meeting with the Senator" if the protesters would leave. "After the group initially agreed, they backed out of the agreement and we are cancelling the event."

(Jack Kurtz/ZUMA Press/Newscom)

In Alabama, protesters took a much different tack, silently standing and turning their backs toward Bloomberg as he spoke at a Selma church.

The Montgomery Advertiser reports:

Bloomberg was invited to speak during Selma's Jubilee, an annual event marking "Bloody Sunday" when hundreds of protesters were beaten and battered while marching across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in 1965.

Ryan Haygood, who turned his back on Bloomberg, told the paper:

I was sitting there really wrestling with the fact that 55 years ago 600 or more people assembled at this church and they prayed and prepared to be brutalized by Alabama state troopers about a half a mile up the bridge. Then comes Michael Bloomberg who when he was the mayor of New York City presided over those very kinds of police brutality practices and policies. So in my mind, I thought, though I was surprised to see him come through the doors, I thought he would use this space to atone for that….

And not only did he not do that, it was clear to me that he wasn't even going to address the issue at all. And so I wrestled with it. So I felt like I had to do something to acknowledge that that's not OK especially in this sacred space. This is a space that changed the world.

According to the Advertiser, around a dozen people "stood for about 30 seconds before Bloomberg realized what was happening. He paused, then stumbled over his words before picking back up with his speech"

Voters in 14 states and American Samoa will go to the polls tomorrow, with 1,357 delegates up for grabs. (To win the nomination, you need 1,991 delegates.) The states holding primaries will be Alabama, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, and Virginia.


QUICK HITS

  • The Trump administration is expanding a coronavirus-related travel ban "to include any foreign national who has visited Iran within the last 14 days," Vice President Mike Pence said on Sunday. "The US is also increasing the travel advisory for Italy and South Korea to Level 4—the highest level—advising Americans not to travel to specific regions in those countries hit hardest by the virus," reports CNN.
  • Two people in Washington state have died from the coronavirus. Ten cases have been confirmed there, all around the Seattle area in King County.
  • Yes, "2016 was the worst election ever," writes Jonathan V. Last at The Bulwark. But what if "every subsequent election is worse?"