From The Hill August 6, 2016 By Kristie McDonald
Top
officials at the biggest police union in the country are upset with Hillary
Clinton, saying she snubbed them.
The
leader of the National Fraternal Order of Police told The Hill that the
Democrat sent a signal through her staff that she wouldn’t be seeking the
union’s endorsement.
“It
sends a powerful message. To be honest with you, I was disappointed and
shocked,” said Chuck Canterbury, the president of the National Fraternal Order
of Police.
“You
would think with law enforcement issues so much in the news that even if she
had disagreements with our positions, that she would’ve been willing to say
that.”
Clinton’s
opponent, Donald Trump, is now actively seeking the union’s support as he
trumpets a “law and order” message on the campaign tail.
Canterbury
spoke to The Hill in a telephone interview Friday, shortly after he left Trump
Tower in Manhattan. He and other leaders of the police union — which says it
represents 335,000 members — visited with Trump on Friday morning to sound out
the Republican nominee about his positions on issues of importance to law
enforcement officers. Politico first reported the meeting.
The
union will not be meeting with Clinton because her campaign decided not to fill
out a questionnaire that is required for seeking the police union’s
endorsement.
“We
were talking to the highest levels of the campaign, and we had all indications
that she was going to return the questionnaire,” Canterbury said. “And on the
deadline date we were advised that they declined.”
The
Fraternal Order of Police has a strict process for making a presidential
endorsement. It first sends each candidate a lengthy questionnaire; after the
candidates complete and return their questionnaires, the union distributes the
answers to its membership.
Finally,
in September, the state chapters vote, and if a candidate receives majority
support in two-thirds of the states, he or she wins the union’s endorsement.
This
year, only Trump’s campaign filled out the questionnaire.
Canterbury
says that to his knowledge the questionnaire snub has only happened once before
— in 2004 with John Kerry. He said President Obama submitted the questionnaire
in both 2008 and 2012. The last time the Fraternal Order of Police endorsed a
Democrat for president was Bill Clinton in 1996, Canterbury said. In 2000 and
2004, the union endorsed George W. Bush, and in 2008 it supported John McCain.
In 2012, the union endorsed neither Obama nor Mitt Romney because neither could
command a two-thirds majority of states, he said.
Asked
about the decision not to seek the police union’s endorsement, Clinton
spokesman Jesse Ferguson said, “Throughout her career, Hillary Clinton has been
committed to our law enforcement officers.”
“As
she said from the beginning of her campaign, across the country, police
officers are out there every day inspiring trust and confidence, honorably
doing their duty, putting themselves on the line to save lives. Read Full Story at The Hill
http://eheadlines.com/police-union-clinton-snubbed-us/
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