Crime and policing Brochin has described himself as a "law and order legislator". In April 2012, Brochin said that he would support reforms providing violent youth offenders with intensive counseling and therapy to deter juvenile crimes in Maryland, citing their success in Texas and Missouri. During the 2015 legislative session, he introduced legislation to prevent people that commit crimes with firearms from receiving good behavior credits during their sentence. In March 2016, Brochin voted for legislation that would redirect low-level drug offenders into treatment instead of prison, expand record expurgations for certain convictions, and reduce sentences for parole violators. Brochin supports the
death penalty and opposed Governor
Martin O'Malley's bill to repeal it, worrying that prosecutors would lose a valuable "bargaining chip" when negotiating
plea deals. He also supported unsuccessful efforts to place a ballot initiative on the death penalty repeal on the 2014 general election ballot. In December 2016, Brochin criticized the state's evidence retention system, which allowed for certain jurisdictions to destroy
rape kits after one year while others had to keep kits indefinitely. During the 2018 legislative session, Brochin introduced a bill that make it easier to convict repeat sexual offenders by allowing prosecutors to introduce evidence showing that they had a pattern of behavior. The bill passed and was signed into law by Governor
Larry Hogan. During an interview on
WBAL-AM radio in 2021, Brochin suggested that Baltimore County residents should boycott Baltimore until it removed
squeegee workers from major intersections. In response, Baltimore Mayor
Brandon Scott remarked, "Thank God the citizens of Baltimore County were smart enough to not elect a gaslighting racist like Jim Brochin", which Brochin responded to in a
Baltimore Sun op-ed denying that his comments were racist.
Development initiatives In August 2011, Brochin suggested implementing a surcharge on eviction notices to help the Baltimore Housing Authority pay nearly $12 million in court-ordered judgments owed to former tenants. During the 2017 legislative session, Brochin introduced a bill that would prohibit county candidates from accepting campaign contributions with developers who apply for certain development or zoning approvals. During his 2018 county executive campaign, he rallied against proposed developments in
Towson, including the Towson Row project and apartments near
Lake Roland Park, In 2021, Brochin helped pay for attorneys representing opponents of a proposed affordable housing project in east Towson.
Education During the 2011 legislative session, Brochin was one of a few Democrats to vote against the
Maryland Dream Act, which extended in-state tuition to
undocumented immigrants. During the 2015 legislative session, Brochin introduced legislation that would prohibit
Baltimore County Public Schools from turning magnet schools into neighborhood schools without the permission of the Baltimore County Delegation. In March 2018, Brochin was the only Democrat in the Maryland Senate to vote against a bill to strip the
Maryland Board of Public Works of its oversight and management of the state's annual "beg-a-thon", in which school system leaders appear before the board to request additional school construction funding. Brochin also voted for a bill to provide low-income students with free tuition to Maryland community colleges.
Environment In January 2015, Brochin said he opposed a
fracking proposal in
western Maryland and introduced a bill to ban fracking in Maryland.
Gun control From 2002 to 2012, Brochin accepted nearly $13,000 in campaign contributions from gun lobby organizations, including more than $2,000 from the
National Rifle Association of America (NRA). The NRA gave Brochin a "B" rating in 2002, followed by "A" ratings and endorsements for his reelection campaigns in 2006 and 2010, but an "F" rating in 2014. Following the
2017 Las Vegas shooting, Brochin voted for a bill to ban
bump stocks in Maryland.
Israel During his 2018 county executive campaign, Brochin said he supported Governor
Larry Hogan's executive order prohibiting companies that support the
Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement from contracting with the state government.
Paid sick leave During the 2017 legislative session, Brochin sought to weaken a paid sick leave bill through amendments reducing the number of sick days employees can receive and allowing the
Maryland Department of Labor to provide hardship waivers to businesses that prove that the law would cause them harm.
Redistricting 's press conference on a bill requiring Maryland to use an
independent redistricting commission if other states agreed to do the same. In May 2017, Brochin voted against a bill that would require Maryland use an
independent redistricting commission to draw its legislative and congressional maps if
New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and North Carolina all agreed to do the same, and spoke at the press conference where Governor
Larry Hogan vetoed this bill. In July 2021, he co-founded Fair Maps Maryland, an anti-
gerrymandering lobbying group, alongside former Republican Howard County Executive
Allan Kittleman. Brochin criticized legislative leaders for forming their own redistricting commission to draw Maryland's congressional and legislative maps during the
2020 United States redistricting cycle, instead endorsing the redistricting commission appointed by Governor
Larry Hogan.
Social issues During the 2007 legislative session, Brochin introduced legislation that would abolish the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse lawsuits. Brochin was a long-time opponent to
same-sex marriage in Maryland, insisting on
civil unions instead, and initially said that he would vote against the
Civil Marriage Protection Act in 2011, but ended up voting for it after hearing same-sex marriage opponents describe members of the gay community as "pedophiles". After the Civil Marriage Protection Act was reintroduced in 2012, he introduced an amendment that would grant same-sex couples the ability to get a civil union instead of a marriage, which was rejected by the Maryland Senate. During the 2014 legislative session, Brochin voted against a bill to ban
discrimination against transgender people, citing a hypothetical example of a
trans woman waiting in the women's restroom to attack. In February 2016, Brochin voted against overriding Governor
Larry Hogan's veto on a bill that would restore the voting rights of recently released felons. In March 2018, Brochin voted against a bill that would require presidential candidates to release their
tax returns to appear on the ballot in Maryland.
Taxes Brochin opposed tax increases proposed by Governor
Martin O'Malley. During the 2015 legislative session, he introduced legislation to repeal
Maryland's "Rain Tax" and another bill to re-add a checkbox on state income tax return forms that would allow taxpayers to contribute to the Fair Campaign Financing Fund. In January 2014, following the publication of a secret audit that found that Baltimore speed cameras had likely charged motorists for thousands more erroneous tickets than previously disclosed, he introduced a bill that would require ombudsmen to hear complaints about erroneous tickets. The bill passed and was signed into law by Governor
Martin O'Malley. In March 2016, Brochin voted against a bill requiring the
Maryland Department of Transportation to use a scoring system to determine which transportation projects it would prioritize. ==Personal life==