JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Black religious leaders on Thursday rallied at the Missouri Capitol and met with political leaders to denounce pending bills that they say are racially biased.
The Reverend Darryl Gray, a longtime St. Louis activist who organized the event, said faith leaders planned to meet with lawmakers, Republican Gov. Mike Parson and Republican Attorney General Eric Schmitt's staff.
Gray said in a statement that religious leaders are trying to convince lawmakers to drop legislation that he called "dangerous, discriminatory, and anti democratic."
Gray said Black leaders are concerned about bills that would make it more difficult for citizens to put issues on the ballot.
He also said they're outraged about lawmakers refusing to pay for voter-approved Medicaid expansion, and raised issues with legislation that would crack down on protesters who block highways.
Gray cautioned that "those who would engage in taking away our rights and freedoms will be remembered next election."
Lawmakers face a May 14 deadline to send bills to Parson.
Missouri House passes bill to crack down on highway protests, dozens of loosely related provisions
Missouri's Republican-led House on Tuesday passed legislation to crack down on protesters who block roadways after amending the measure to cram in provisions from dozens of other loosely related bills.
The main bill, approved 98-50, would make it a felony to repeatedly block traffic without permission, a tactic that has been used to draw attention to racial injustice.
Republican bill sponsor Sen. Bill Eigel has said he thought of the idea after protesters angered by the death of George Floyd blocked traffic on Interstate 70 in the St. Louis area last summer. He's argued that blocking highways puts protesters and drivers in danger.
St. Louis Democratic Rep. LaKeySha Bosley during the debate on the House floor said lawmakers need to address the root issues that pushed Missourians to take to the streets.
She said the bill's Tuesday passage instead shows that the Legislature is trying to stifle protests.
“We are telling them time and time again that we are upset that you're disrupting our happy little lives, that you are telling us and showing us our inequities and how wrong we are," Bosley said.
The legislation also would require offenders who commit dangerous felonies against police, firefighters or other first responders to serve their full sentence without the opportunity for probation.
Another provision sets up guidelines for internal reviews of possible police misconduct. The bill would set a 90-day limit for internal investigations of alleged police misconduct, with exceptions. Among other provisions, the measure would make all records of those internal police investigations closed to the public.
“If you have the back of law enforcement today, you know what to. You will vote yes," suburban St. Louis Republican Rep. Nick Schroer said. "If you don't have the back of the men and women in blue, you know what to do: vote no."
Lawmakers on Tuesday added provisions ranging from a ban on police use of chokeholds to allowing concealed firearms in places of worship without the permission of religious leaders.
The tactic of packing multiple bills into an omnibus package is commonly used by lawmakers near the end of session, which this year is May 14.
The goal is to squeeze in as many priorities as possible in hopes that the primary bill will make it across the finish line, carrying the other measures to success.
The House’s extensive additions almost certainly guarantee that the bill’s Senate sponsor will ask to strip some of the new provisions from the measure before it goes back to the House and Senate for a final vote.
Among other things, the bill also would:
- Lower the age when someone can first get a concealed carry permit from 19 to 18
- Legalize brass knuckles
- Make it a crime for police to have sex with detainees, prisoners or anyone else if they're on duty and use coercion
- Allow judges to take away driver’s licenses if people fail to appear in court twice, a change criticized by champions of court reforms adopted following the fatal police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson