Many battleground state pollsters missed candidate Donald Trump's rise in 2016. Here's why the polls might be more accurate for President Trump's reelection race.
In today鈥檚 edition, our five hand-picked stories cover the credibility of U.S. election polls, the enduring hope in U.S. places of despair, the resilience of Jewish-Muslim communities, some ways around partisan roadblocks, and how the Rev. Robin Hood helps Chicago鈥檚 downtrodden.
First, more than 450 inmates walked out of prison in Oklahoma on Monday. It was the biggest single mass commutation 鈥 or act of forgiveness 鈥 in U.S. history.听
Wait. Isn鈥檛 this 鈥淭rump Country鈥? Are conservatives now going soft on crime?
Yes, and no. More than 65% of Oklahomans did vote for Donald Trump in 2016. On the same day, Oklahomans also approved a referendum to reclassify drug possession as a misdemeanor.听聽
Oklahoma highlights a major shift in how all Americans view crime. It reflects a close alignment between liberals and conservatives in making the justice system fairer and less expensive. We saw that with last year鈥檚 congressional passage of the First Step Act.
What鈥檚 behind this conservative shift on crime and punishment? The short answer: the crystal meth and opioid epidemics. The injustice of going to prison on a minor drug charge is increasingly personal. A 2017 national poll showed . Oklahoma has the highest prison rate in the nation, and over-incarceration is the definition of inefficient government. Oklahoma Republican Kris Steele tells The Washington Post the GOP shift also aligns with 海角大神 values, such as .听
Tess Harjo might agree. She was freed Monday after serving nearly two years of a 15-year sentence for drug possession. After hugging her waiting aunts and grandmother, she told The Oklahoman her 鈥