Rand Paul and Chris Christie will occupy opposite ends of the GOP presidential field should they run in 2016, but the two of them are starting to sound similar notes when it comes to the war on drugs.
In recent weeks, Paul has campaigned for new laws restoring voting rights to convicted felons, many of whom he says pay too high a price for too long after committing nonviolent drug offenses. He plans to introduce a bill soon that he claims could allow as many as one million felons to vote again.
“It’s the biggest voting rights issue of our day,” Paul said on NBC’s “Meet The Press” on Sunday. “We’ve gotten distracted by a lot of other things. We think there may be a million people who are being prevented from voting from having a previous felony conviction.”
At the same time, Christie has embarked on a new push to change drug laws in New Jersey to emphasize treatment for addiction over punitive jail sentences. He has bluntly called the war on drugs a failure and delivered a speech on Friday to the socially conservative Faith and Freedom Coalition arguing reform should be part of their agenda.
“From the womb until natural death, we need to be there even for those who stumble and fall, to be there to lift them up,” Christie said. “To me that’s the true meaning, the complete meaning, of being pro-life.”









