U.S. President Joe Biden vowed Wednesday to reduce gun violence as he warned the nation about a dangerous summer spike in killings.“We’re taking on the bad actors doing bad and dangerous things in our communities and to our country,” he said in a U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland, accompanied by U.S. President Joe Biden, delivers remarks on steps to curtail U.S. gun violence, in Washington, June 23, 2021.Local partnersSpeaking just prior to the president, U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland said prosecutors across the country would work with local partners “to establish an immediate plan to address the spike in violent crime that typically occurs during the summer.”Biden unveiled his crime plan after meeting with a bipartisan group of mayors, community activists and law enforcement officials.“The president was engaged. He wanted to know the strategies that were working on the ground in our communities, in our states,” said New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal. “And we had a talk about a holistic response, which the president outlined in his proposal today, along with Attorney General Garland, and the response really models what’s been working in all of our communities.”Grewal and Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott told reporters that the gun violence in their communities was a “public health crisis.”Many Republicans are seizing on an uptick in crime to blast those on the political left over their purported anti-police policies.FILE – House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy of California speaks at a press briefing on Capitol Hill in Washington, April 22, 2021.“Biden wants to blame guns and lawful gun owners instead of Democrats’ open embrace of the ‘Defund the Police’ movement and soft-on-crime approach,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy said in a statement issued Wednesday.Skepticism“Unfortunately, in many ways, what the president is proposing will not stem the tide of violent crime,” Zack Smith, a Heritage Foundation legal fellow, told VOA. “What he’s saying now about funding the police sounds good, but many in his party are calling to defund the police, which is exactly what we don’t need right now.”As a U.S. senator in the 1990s, Biden helped craft the controversial 1994 Crime Bill, which critics blame for the mass incarceration of African Americans in recent decades. But during the 2020 presidential campaign, he distanced himself from the legislation and embraced much of the progressives’ criminal reform agenda — even as he stopped short of supporting calls to ”defund” the police.FILE – Community members and police attend a vigil beside a makeshift memorial at the scene where Justin Wallace, 10, was shot and killed the previous Saturday night in the Rockaway section of the Queens borough of New York, June 9, 2021.Homicide numbersIn New York City, there have been 194 homicides so far this year, up from 171 during the same period last year, according to the latest police data. In Los Angeles, the second-largest U.S. city, the number stands at 148 homicides, up from 121 last year, while in Chicago, the nation’s third-largest city, homicides have increased to 307 this year, from 296 during the same period last year.The spike in homicides and shootings started last summer after cities began easing COVID-19-related restrictions. According to a recent survey by the Major Cities Chiefs Association, a professional organization of police executives representing the largest cities in the United States and Canada, there were 8,077 homicides in 66 major U.S. cities in 2020, up 33% from 2019, which had 6,087.Precisely what is driving the violence remains a matter of debate. While criminologists point to the upheavals caused by the pandemic, nationwide protests over George Floyd’s death and a proliferation of guns on American streets, many law enforcement officials blame a ”softening” of criminal laws that have allowed thousands of offenders to avoid jail time.VOA’s Masood Farivar   contributed to this report.

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