In The News

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  • ICYMI: Goodlatte & Conyers Discuss Policing & Criminal Justice Reform
    Posted in In The News on December 5, 2016 | Preview rr
    Tags: House Judiciary Committee Issues

    House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) and Ranking Member John Conyers (D-Mich.) joined C-SPAN Newsmakers to discuss the bipartisan Policing Strategies Working Group and the Committee’s efforts to reform our nation’s criminal justice system. C-SPAN’s co-CEO Susan Swain moderated the interview and Kimbriell Kelly of the Washington Post and Jesse Holland of the Associated Press interviewed Chairman Goodlatte and Ranking Member Conyers. “We are working hard to try to promote a dia... Read more

  • Daily News Record: Goodlatte Tackles Drug Prices
    Posted in In The News on November 17, 2015 | Preview rr

    By Rachel Cisto BROADWAY — Nelson Showalter has owned the Broadway Drug Mart since 1987, when he purchased the business from his father. Over nearly 30 years, Showalter has built up a loyal customer base, but as he explained to U.S. Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Roanoke, on Monday, the cost of some prescription drugs might make that base harder to maintain. Goodlatte visited the Broadway pharmacy one day before the House Judiciary Committee begins a series of hearings on competition in health care. Good... Read more

  • National Review Online: Reduce Prison Sentences, but Not for Violent Offenders
    Posted in In The News on November 2, 2015 | Preview rr

    By Representative Bob Goodlatte Starting this month, thousands of federal inmates are set to be released early from federal prison, including serious violent felons and criminal aliens. This action is not the result of legislation passed by the people’s elected representatives in Congress. Rather, it is a result of a decision made by unelected officials appointed to the United States Sentencing Commission. In early 2014, the Sentencing Commission adopted an amendment to reduce the sentences for ... Read more

  • Northern Virginia Daily: ITFederal breaks ground in Front Royal
    Posted in In The News on October 26, 2015 | Preview rr

    By Kaley Toy FRONT ROYAL – An ITFederal groundbreaking ceremony was held at the former Avtex Fibers site on Monday afternoon. U.S. Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., said, this is a “new era for economic development.” The $40 million project located on 30 acres of the former Superfund site on Kendrick Lane, near the EDA building in Front Royal, is anticipated to bring about 600 new jobs to the area. “Hundreds are expected to be working here,” Goodlatte said. This was a long process, Goodlatte added, tha... Read more

  • Richmond Times Dispatch: Editorial: Good for Goodlatte for defending free speech on college campuses
    Posted in In The News on August 19, 2015 | Preview rr

    By Editorial Board In recent years, colleges and universities have come under tremendous pressure from a wide array of sources, from the federal Education Department to student activists on campus, that has led them to ride roughshod over the constitutional right to free speech. Far too many public institutions have adopted campus speech codes that restrict not only where and when members of the community can speak freely to small “free-speech zones,” but also sharply curtail what they can say. ... Read more

  • Washington Times: Bob Goodlatte wants answers from Loretta Lynch on Obama drug pardons
    Posted in In The News on July 14, 2015 | Preview rr

    By Maggie Ybarra The chairman of the House Judiciary Committee wants U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch to answer detailed questions about the 89 drug offenders to whom President Obama has granted clemency. Rep. Bob Goodlatte, Virginia Republican, and 18 other committee Republicans say they are deeply concerned that Mr. Obama has been using his pardon power to benefit specific classes of offenders. They listed their concerns about the presidential pardons, which they say appear to be going to a... Read more

  • U.S. News & World Report: An Unnecessary Invasion of Privacy
    Posted in In The News on May 21, 2015 | Preview rr

    By Senator Patrick Leahy and Representative Bob Goodlatte For the past nine years, Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act has been used by the National Security Agency as legal authority to indiscriminately collect Americans' telephone records into a massive, secret database. Americans were outraged when they learned that billions of their phone records were stocked away in a government database – especially when national security experts examined the program and concluded that it was not essential ... Read more

  • USA Today: Let the taxman die
    Posted in In The News on May 13, 2015 | Preview rr

    By Representatives Bob Goodlatte and Kevin Brady Tax Day — a day that more Americans hate than any other — has come and gone. The recent scandals and bureaucratic bungling by the Internal Revenue Service have so angered the public that cries to "Abolish the IRS" trigger enthusiastic applause at political rallies and have become popular bumper stickers all over the country. Americans rightly gripe about taxes and lawmakers from left to right tout their commitment to tax reform, and occasionally e... Read more

  • The Hill: Pass Freedom Act Now
    Posted in In The News on May 12, 2015 | Preview rr

    By Reps. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) and Jim Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.) Recently, a federal appeals court ruled that the National Security Agency’s bulk collection program is not authorized under Section 215 of the Patriot Act. This court ruling confirms what we’ve been saying all along: bulk collection of data is not authorized under the law and is not accepted by the American people. It also reaffirms that a straight reauthorization of the bulk collection program, as some have proposed, is not a choice ... Read more

  • News & Advance: Lynchburg's Goodlatte at Fore of Civil Liberties Fight
    Posted in In The News on May 10, 2015 | Preview rr

    By THE EDITORIAL BOARD There’s a civil liberties revolution brewing in the House of Representatives, and Rep. Bob Goodlatte, as chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, is leading the fight. When Edward Snowden, the National Security Agency whistleblower, began leaking details of the NSA’s intelligence gathering operations and the scope of the data the U.S. government was collecting from around the globe, many Americans were shocked. And nothing shocked the average American more than the revel... Read more