WASHINGTON – U.S. Rep. Jason Lewis has joined a group of unlikely allies in trying to reshape the criminal justice system.
The Minnesota Republican has teamed up with U.S. Rep. Bobby Scott, a Democrat from Virginia, to advocate changes to federal law that would favor rehabilitation over imprisonment for first-time, nonviolent offenders — particularly juveniles — and reduce exploding incarceration budgets. Groups as ideologically diverse as the NAACP, FreedomWorks, Families Against Mandatory Minimums and the American Conservative Union all back their proposals.
A freshman congressman from a political swing district, Lewis has in recent months highlighted several areas where his libertarian sensibilities have broken with the law-and-order orthodoxy of the Republican Party. He believes states should be permitted to legalize marijuana, at a time when U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions wants to get tougher on marijuana crimes.
And, in embracing sentencing reforms, Lewis has emphasized the spiraling costs of a large federal prison population. Sessions has also publicly resisted calls for prison sentencing reforms.
"The bottom line is the budget is getting out of control and the number of people being incarcerated is getting out of control," Lewis said.
Several efforts are underway in Washington to provide more support for prisoners. Several weeks ago, the House Judiciary Committee passed the bipartisan First Step Act to provide more resources for inmates in an effort to prevent them from committing new crimes once they are released — a bill championed by President Donald Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner. But Lewis and Scott describe their own proposals as the most comprehensive approach.
"Criminal justice reform, reducing crime and saving money — that's a position that Jason has adopted, and I think we can make some progress working together in the House," Scott said in an interview. "We don't belabor the fact that we disagree on a lot of the other issues."
The pair met last year while serving on the House committee overseeing health, education, labor and pensions. Scott, who has served in the House since 1993, was looking for a Republican to partner with on criminal justice reform. They started with the Juvenile Justice Reform Act, aiming to boost education and training for at-risk youth and juvenile offenders instead of imposing harsh penalties for minor infractions.