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Bush and Kerry Miles Apart on the Death Penalty

Here's an issue we should be talking about more than George Bush's cocaine use--Bush and Kerry's different stances on the death penalty.

Should Sen. John F. Kerry be elected in November, the United States would have as president its strongest opponent of the death penalty in at least the last half-century, capital punishment opponents believe. Kerry would be "the most anti-death penalty president elected in the modern era," according to David Elliot of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty.

...As governor of Texas, Bush signed off on 152 executions. As president, he has maintained his support for the death penalty. Three men have been executed under federal law while he has been in office, the first federal executions since 1963.

....Kerry has said he opposes capital punishment except in cases involving terrorism. While he may have voted in favor of some omnibus crime bills that included expansions of capital punishment, on stand-alone legislation Kerry has opposed the death penalty in a variety of ways.

< Fallout from Reversals of Detriot Terror Convictions | $1Million Grant for Innocence Law Center >
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