Religious leaders buoyed by a successful alliance with the Trump
administration are readying a pressure campaign with a new target:
Senate conservatives who are blocking criminal justice reform.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, backed by Republicans with
evangelical ties such as Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, is blocking a
Trump-approved plan to revamp the criminal justice system, the latest
priority of religious groups after they focused much of their earlier
efforts on stocking the courts with conservative judges.
McConnell so far has resisted efforts to bring to the floor the
bipartisan bill that would reduce maximum penalties for repeat offenders
and give judges more discretion in handing down prison sentences,
knowing it has already created deep divisions within the GOP caucus.
But religious leaders — who have the weight of President Donald Trump
behind them — are preparing to pressure McConnell and other senators,
such as Cruz and David Perdue (R-Ga.), to change their minds.
Starting next week, the Faith and Freedom Coalition will ask its 2
million members to flood Congress with letters and phone calls, said
coalition Chairman Ralph Reed. Religious groups hope they can put enough
pressure on Republicans with large evangelical constituencies to get a
rare piece of major bipartisan legislation passed in a bitterly divided
Congress.
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