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Jim Webb leads the defense for firefighters and law enforcers
Jim Webb leads the defense for firefighters and law enforcers
Webb for President…when he gets around to it.
“We will not back down. We will keep fighting.
This week Republican Senators blocked an important opportunity to make our criminal justice system more fair and effective. They filibustered legislation I introduced to create a blue-ribbon, bipartisan commission of experts charged with undertaking an 18-month, top-to-bottom review of the nation’s criminal justice system and offering concrete recommendations for reform.
Their inflammatory arguments defy reasonable explanation and were contradicted by the plain language of our legislation. To suggest, for example, that the non-binding recommendations of a bipartisan commission threaten the Constitution is absurd.
But we have been here before: In 2007, our soldiers and Marines were being deployed again and again, resulting in rising mental health problems and falling retention rates. On two occasions, I offered legislation requiring active-duty troops to have equal time at home as on deployment. On both occasions, Republican Senators blocked this sensible, time-honored policy.
We did not back down. We kept fighting and we changed the debate. Today proper dwell-time rotations are a top priority at the highest levels of the Defense Department.
Likewise, over the last five years we have put the issue of criminal justice reform on the national agenda and changed the tone of the debate. When I first raised the issue in 2006, it was believed to be political suicide. But after years of building the case for reform, we have earned the trust and support of advocates across the philosophical and political spectrum, including the National Sheriffs’ Association, the International Association of Chiefs of Police, the U.S. Conference of Mayors, the Fraternal Order of Police, the Sentencing Project, the NAACP, the ACLU and Prison Fellowship.
We will not back down. We will keep fighting for a comprehensive review of the justice system, with the help of the thousands of sheriffs, police, mayors and justice advocates who have joined us in pressing for reform.
What They’re Saying about the National Criminal Justice Commission Act
LAW ENFORCEMENT LEADERS:
Chief Michael J. Carroll, International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) President, 2/24/2011:
“For more than twenty years, the IACP has advocated for the creation of a commission that would follow in the footsteps of the 1965 Presidential Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice… The IACP believes that it is imperative that the National Criminal Justice Commission Act be approved in a timely fashion. For far too long our nation’s law enforcement and criminal justice system has lacked a strategic plan that will guide and integrate public safety and homeland security’s effort in the years ahead.”
Chuck Canterbury, National President, Fraternal Order of Police, 2/16/2011:
“The recommendations made by the 1965 commission provided the basis for a legislative overhaul and modernization of the criminal justice system... Law enforcement has changed a great deal in the last few decades. We believe that establishing a national commission...will only help law enforcement officers do their jobs more effectively, more, efficiently and more safely.”
Sheriff B.J. Roberts, President of National Sheriffs’ Association (NSA), 2/15/2011:
“Emerging issues in law enforcement, such as acts of terrorism and threats to homeland security, make the creation of a national commission all the more necessary to ensure law enforcement…has the tools and knowledge necessary to adapt to the continually evolving justice system. The NSA commends Senator Webb on his leadership on this critical issue and we look forward to working with him to pass S. 306 during the 112th Congress.”
CRIMINAL JUSTICE EXPERTS:
Charles Colson, Founder, Prison Fellowship, 7/22/2009:
“I write this from the perspective of a conservative who has always been comfortable as a reformer… I don’t believe this is an ideological issue at all, but one on which people of good will, conservative and liberal alike, could join forces to make prisons more effective, humane and successful… We will certainly give you all the help we can to build support for your legislation.”
Brian W. Walsh, The Heritage Foundation, 6/11/2009:
“Reform experts who are serious about criminal-justice reform should draw encouragement from Senator Webb’s efforts to date to reach out to elected officials on both sides of the aisle and to criminal-justice reform advocates across the conservative-to-liberal spectrum.”
Marc Mauer, Executive Director of The Sentencing Project, 4/20/2009:
“A new approach to crime prevention is necessary and the time for reform is upon us. The commission created by this legislation would establish an organized and proactive approach to studying and advancing programs and policies that promote public safety, while overhauling those practices that are found to be fundamentally flawed… We strongly urge passage of the National Criminal Justice Commission Act.”
Professor Charles J. Ogletree of Harvard Law School, 6/11/2009:
“The comprehensive, timely, and important bill proposed by Senator Jim Webb will go a long way toward addressing some of the severe inequities in the criminal justice system. This effort should be pursued with great vigor to ensure that we not only hold offenders accountable, but that we implement criminal justice policies that are sensible, fair, increase public safety and make judicious use of our state and federal resources.”
Learn more about the National Criminal Justice Commission Act here:http://www.webb.senate.gov/..._Justice_Banner.cfm.”



Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (11)
at 10:17 on October 21st, 2011
This week Republican Senators blocked an important opportunity to make our criminal justice system more fair and effective. They filibustered legislation I introduced to create a blue-ribbon, bipartisan commission of experts charged with undertaking an 18-month, top-to-bottom review of the nation’s criminal justice system and offering concrete recommendations for reform.
Republicans won't let anything go through on Obama's watch..lol
at 11:27 on October 21st, 2011
That brings up a good theme -- It's our watch, not Obama's
at 12:16 on October 21st, 2011
http://my.nowpublic.com/world/republican-work-stoppage-theyre-strike
at 18:22 on October 21st, 2011
Senator Webb D-Va. agent of the big government cartel seeking to expand the Federalist hand into State authority.
Our Constitutional fathers, familiar with the strength and weakness of both autocracy and democracy, with fixed principles definitely in mind, defined a representative republican form of government. They 'made a very marked distinction between a republic and a democracy and said repeatedly and emphatically that they had founded a republic.
The Democrat continues to endeavor to replace the noble Constitutional Republic with their Mobocracy.
at 04:15 on October 22nd, 2011
Well over 99.9% of us in the U.S. have no idea what it takes to keep this republic going. I have a good analogy to bring this point home. Good community (not an isolated people living in some cookie-cutter sprawl of suburbia where neighbors could be Mother Theresa and John Wayne Gacy but you don't know) requires adequate services, with police and fire protection high on the list. Services cost money. Community revenue requires funds to be raised, or we can wait for funds to fall from the sky. Smart communities tax. Smarter communities tax land value...but that's a discussion for another day.
A good community is like a car...you know it is running well when crime/fires are low and people take pride in their surroundings (engine running on all cylinders); schools are producing scholars and solid citizens ready to take on the challenges of the day (car has been detailed and all is in factory-new shape); economic downturn appears on the horizon with jobs going overseas (let's let up on the gas pedal, maybe take the bus tomorrow); your neighbor asks to car pool with you (so you add air to your tires to accommodate a larger service need); you plan to retire in 6 months but you just learned your investments are now worth nothing because of a flaw in banking regulations (you run over a box of nails that fell off a carpenter's truck); you and your neighbors allow your Congressman to bail out the financial company where your investments were lost (the carpenter wants you to remove his nails from your tire so he can finishing building the mansion for the bailed out financial company CEO, and you pay to have that done, because your neighbors are doing the same thing); your Republican governor says smaller government is best (you start using lower quality gasoline, buy used tires, and allow headlights to burn out without replacement to save money); your community can't afford its fire and police services, so you support layoffs of these dedicated officials (you drive on one flat tire and damage your rim); crime in your community goes up (you drive on two flat tires and damage two rims); your city declares bankruptcy (you stop driving and put the car up on blocks). Next step? A Freidmanite mayor would get a ladder, climb into the car and pretend all is well; you've got smaller government and the illusion that he/she is doing the best he/she can. A true idiot. A smart mayor would ask for volunteers to get the car/community running again. Maybe have a bake sale or barn raising party. Maybe take over the new mansion and call it city hall.
at 04:36 on October 22nd, 2011
Excellent response --better than the article.
My Dad was a volunteer fireman in a small town when I was young. If something caught fire, the siren went off, and hearing that volunteers rushed to the firehouse to man the trucks. Off they went.
at 06:32 on October 22nd, 2011
Your reply means a lot to me. Thought you'd like it. Funny how it was confusing to some.
at 04:36 on October 22nd, 2011
....that was easily the worst metaphor I have had the displeasure of reading. A CAR?
at 05:12 on October 22nd, 2011
sad liberal hack who thinks government knows best and the bigger the government the better his life will be
at 06:32 on October 22nd, 2011
The "Not verified" have weighed in. Metaphor critics.
at 09:57 on October 22nd, 2011
lol