Obama’s paltry pardons
President Barack Obama granted 78 pardons last month, doubling the total for his presidency — and ensuring that it will not go down as the least forgiving in more than a century. Instead, it will probably end up as the secondleast forgiving.
There are 50,000 people released from federal prisons each year, and many return to states that either permanently bar them from voting or require them to apply for restoration of their rights. Most of these felons don’t deserve pardons, of course; only 3,000 have applied. And most ex-offenders without voting rights have committed state, not federal, crimes.
None of this should stop Obama from issuing pardons in deserving federal cases.
Obama has received far more applications — some 31,000 — than his predecessors. The reason is simple: He invited federal prisoners to apply. A frequent critic of the nation’s harsh sentencing laws, he is the first president to organize an official clemency initiative to address the issue.
As it turns out, a clemency initiative is not a very good way to address the issue. For every commutation Obama has granted, he has denied 14 others. Of the 190,000 federal prisoners, Obama has reduced sentences for only about sixtenths of 1 percent. So far at least, Obama has found relatively few federal prisoners deserving of mercy.
The truth is that, as the data has shown all along, reducing prison populations — a worthy goal — is a lot harder than it sounds. Obama deserves credit for bringing attention to the challenge and supporting some sentencing reforms that have helped address it. Unfortunately, his record has not matched his rhetoric.