Americans' views of how the criminal justice system is
handling crime have shifted considerably over the past decade, according to Gallup. Currently, 45%
say the justice system is "not tough enough" -- down from 65% in 2003
and even higher majorities before then. Americans are now more likely than they
have been in three prior polls to describe the justice system's approach as
"about right" (35%) or "too tough" (14%).
Americans' views
of how the criminal justice system is handling crime have shifted considerably
over the past decade. Currently, 45% say the justice system is "not tough
enough" -- down from 65% in 2003 and even higher majorities before then. Americans
are now more likely than they have been in three prior polls to describe the
justice system's approach as "about right" (35%) or "too
tough" (14%).
Incarceration rates in the U.S. have soared over the past
few decades, and political leaders, justice officials and reform advocates have
sought criminal justice reform as a result. With this, Americans' views of the
criminal justice system have shifted with the national conversation, with less
than a majority now saying the system is "not tough enough." Although
considerably higher than in the past, relatively few believe the system is
"too tough."
Views of the justice system's toughness vary across racial
and political party lines. The majority of Republicans and Republican-leaning
independents say it is "not tough enough" (65%), with most of the
rest describing it as "about right" (30%). Democrats and
Democratic-leaning independents, on the other hand, are most likely to say the
system is "about right" (42%), with the rest dividing about evenly
between saying it is "too tough" (22%) or "not tough
enough" (29%).
A majority of whites (53%) say the system's handling of
crime is "not tough enough," while a third (32%) say it is
"about right." One in 10 whites say the system is "too
tough." Nonwhites -- who as a group make up a disproportionate percentage
of the U.S. incarcerated population -- are more than twice as likely as whites
to say the system is "too tough" (23%). They are also more likely
than whites to say it is "about right" (40%). Meanwhile, 30% of
nonwhites say the system's handling of crime is "not tough enough."
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