Obama
pitches help to ex-criminals, draws N.J. governor's ire
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[November 03, 2015]
By Jeff Mason
NEWARK, N.J. (Reuters) - President Barack
Obama announced new measures to smooth the integration of former
criminals into society but his visit to New Jersey on Monday irked the
state's governor, a struggling Republican presidential candidate.
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Obama, a Democrat who has made criminal justice reform a top
priority of his final years in office, praised organizations in
Newark for their efforts to help those who have served prison terms
to reintegrate into civilian life.
"We've got to make sure Americans who have paid their debt to
society can earn their second chance," Obama said in a speech at
Rutgers University in Newark, a city of about 280,000 that has
grappled for decades with poverty and high rates of violent crime.
Obama said he was banning "the box" that applicants had to check
about their criminal histories when applying for certain federal
jobs. He praised companies such as Wal-Mart, Target, Koch
Industries, and Home Depot for taking similar measures in the
private sector. The president noted that Congress was considering
similar measures.
But New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, who is failing to gain
traction in his bid for the Republican Party's nomination to run for
the White House in the November 2016 election, said Obama's policies
had hurt police departments nationwide.
"(Obama) does not support law enforcement. Simply doesn't. And he's
going to come today to New Jersey in a place where, under my tenure,
we have reduced crime 20 percent and reduced the prison population
10 percent," Christie said on MSNBC TV.
"It's a disgrace that he's coming to New Jersey today to take credit
for this stuff when he's been someone who's undercut it."
The new steps unveiled by the White House included up to $8 million
in federal education grants over three years for former inmates as
well as new guidance on the use of arrest records in determining
eligibility for public and federally assisted housing.
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Obama in July became the first sitting president to visit a federal
prison. He has called on Congress to pass legislation to change
sentencing laws to help reduce the number of people serving long
sentences for non-violent drug crimes.
With only 5 percent of the world’s population, the United States
accounts for about 25 percent of the world’s prison population,
according to the American Civil Liberties Union.
Christie's criticism contrasted with his praise for Obama in 2012
when the president visited New Jersey after the damage caused by
Hurricane Sandy at the tail end of his election campaign against
Republican rival Mitt Romney.
White House spokesman Josh Earnest questioned the reasoning behind
Christie's less friendly welcome on Monday.
“Governor Christie’s comments in this regard have been particularly
irresponsible, though not surprising for somebody whose poll numbers
are closer to an asterisk than they are double digits. Clearly this
is part of the strategy to turn that around,” Earnest said.
(additional reporting by Peter Cooney, Roberta Rampton and Julia
Edwards; editing by Grant McCool)
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