Campaigning for Non-Votes
Sam Brownback Goes to Prison
Believe it or not, its less than fourteen months until the Iowa caucuses and the New Hampshire primary. Thus, theres hardly a potluck dinner or a PTA meeting in either state that wont be graced by the presence of at least one would-be presidential candidate.
Even in the era of the perpetual campaign, there are some places where you dont, however, expect to find possible presidential candidates. One of them used to be inside a prison.
I said, used to be, because Senator Sam Brownback (R) of Kansas, who has established a presidential exploratory committee, wasnt in Iowa or New Hampshire this past weekendhe was in Louisiana. Specifically, he was in Angola, Louisiana, the site of one of Americas most famousor infamousprisons.
Brownback spent the night in a 7-by-10-foot cell. He called his night a little rough, adding, I didnt sleep the best.
Obviously, Brownback didnt spend the night at Angola for the accommodations. Nor did he do it as some kind of campaign stunt. As he put it, There arent probably a lot of votes for me here.
What was there was an opportunity to promote religious-based prison efforts to curtail violence and provide inmates with an alternative to crime onceor ifthey got out.
Brownback told reporters, We dont want to build more prisons in the country [and] we dont want to lock people up. We want people to be good, productive citizens.
Not only do these programs make a difference after release, they can also make a difference before prisoners are released. Angolas warden, Burl Cain, has credited a drop in violence at the prison to these kinds of programs. Thats why he and other corrections officials and Prison Fellowship support them.
Its not often that you hear a possible presidential candidate saying, We dont want to build more prisons in this country, or that were not addressing the problems and needs of prisoners. In fact, I cant recall any presidential candidate ever saying anything like this. (And let me add, I dont endorse political candidates, and I am not doing so now, though I think the world of Brownback.)
Knowing Sam as I do, Im not surprised that he spent a night in prison. He has been a strong supporter of the InnerChange Freedom Initiative® launched by Prison Fellowship in his home state and has stayed in those prisons as well. A practicing Roman Catholic, Brownback understands that a Christian worldview isnt bound by the categories that have rendered American politics empty and stale. Instead, he puts his faith into action, following in the great tradition of William Wilberforce, the English parliamentarian and a hero of mine who led the crusade to abolish the slave trade. Like Wilberforce, Sam knows that the way we treat the least of these in our midst is how we measure the quality of our society.
Ironically, on the same weekend that Brownback spent a night in prison promoting faith-based programs, the New York Times published a grossly misleading attack on the InnerChange Freedom Initiative. The contrast between competing visions of the common good couldnt have been more stark: The Times ignores real-world results in order to maintain its slanted version of separation of church and state. Brownback, while also committed to this separation, insists that it doesnt require the removal of faith from the public square.
Not unless your goal, that is, is to build more prisons.
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From BreakPoint®, December 13, 2006, Copyright 2006, Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with the permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced or distributed without the express written permission of Prison Fellowship Ministries. BreakPoint® and Prison Fellowship Ministries® are registered trademarks of Prison Fellowship Ministries.