Sessions vs. Grassley: Sentencing Reform Sparks Fight on the Conservative Right

Sessions vs. Grassley: Sentencing Reform Sparks Fight on the Conservative Right

US Senator Charles "Chuck" Grassley (R-IA)

Attorney General Jeff Sessions came out against a painstakingly cobbled-together Senate sentencing reform bill Wednesday, sparking a public food fight with Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA), the head of the Senate Judiciary Committee and the very face of dour Corn Belt conservatism.

Ina letter reported by Reuters, Sessions warned the committee not to approve the sentencing reform bill,S. 1917, claiming it would reduce sentences for a highly dangerous cohort of criminals.

Passage of the bill would be a grave error, Sessions said.

The measure is actually a mixed bag, a product of lengthy discussions among senators seeking a compromise that could actually pass the Senate. While it has a number of progressive sentencing reform provisions, mainly aimed atnonviolentdrug offenders, it also includes new mandatory minimum sentences for some crimes, including some drug offenses. Those provisions provide political cover to conservatives fearful of being tagged soft on crime, but tired of perpetuating failed drug war policies.

Sessions has no qualms about hardline drug war policies, and his voicing opposition to the sentencing reform bill doesnt come as a shock. But Grassley, who has been shepherding the bill along for months, took it personally.

In aninterview with Bloomberg PoliticsWednesday afternoon, the rock-ribbed Republican ripped into Sessions, accusing him of being ungrateful after Grassley protected him from Democratic demands for public hearings on his contacts with the Russians and supported him when President Trump wanted to fire him.

I think its legitimate to be incensed and I resent it, because of what Ive done for him. He had a tough nomination, a tough hearing in my committee, Grassley said. They wanted to call him back every other day for additional hearings about his Russian connection, and I shut them off of that until we had the normal oversight hearing in October I believe it was, see? And the president was going to fire him, and I backed him, you know? So why wouldnt I be irritated?

Grassley also took to Twitterto express his umbrage at his former colleague, tweeting: Incensed by Sessions letter An attempt to undermine Grassley/Durbin/Lee BIPARTISAN criminal justice reforms This bill deserves thoughtful consideration b4 my cmte. AGs execute laws CONGRESS WRITES THEM!

For Grassley and the bipartisan coalition attempting to move the bill forward, Sessions intervention is little more than last-minute backstabbing. A hearing to mark up the draft bill is set for Thursday.

Again, that Sessions would try to derail sentencing ...

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