Barker Bulletin
Week 8: A stronger and safer Iowa
Last weekend, I enjoyed attending the Colo-NESCO Royal Gala with Senator Kara Warme. It was great to see so many folks from NE Story County supporting students at Colo-NESCO.
On Monday, the House HHS Appropriations Subcommittee visited Des Moines University to learn more about our healthcare workforce and residency challenges and opportunities in Iowa. This week at the Capitol, I was able to visit with DMACC and Iowa Valley Community Colleges, parents and students from Ames Christian School, Iowa State student government, Grand View University social work students, and Iowa Young Republicans.
This week was a marathon of floor debate with late nights in the House. The House is working to send as many House bills as possible over to the Senate so they can be considered in committee prior to the 2nd legislative funnel deadline in a couple weeks.
Republicans advance strong anti- crime bills
We’ve seen it countless times across the country, career criminals who have never had to face consequences for their actions harming and even killing innocent people. House Republicans have had enough and introduced three major pieces of legislation this year. On Wednesday, the bills were passed off the house floor and sent to the Senate for their consideration. Below is an explanation of the bills:
House File 2542- Habitual offenders
House File 2542 takes a serious approach to repeat offenders by creating a clear point system to identify those who repeatedly break the law. Under the bill, all felonies and certain high-level aggravated misdemeanors count as one point, while all other aggravated misdemeanors and some serious misdemeanors count as half a point. Once someone reaches three points, they qualify as a habitual offender and shall be sentenced to a minimum of 20 years in prison. A person sentenced under this is not eligible for parole.
This bill addresses the revolving door we see too often in our justice system. Instead of treating repeat low-level violent or drug-related offenses as isolated incidents, HF 2542 recognizes the pattern and the growing risk to the community. When someone consistently refuses to follow the law, there should be real consequences. By establishing a mandatory minimum 20-year sentence at the three-point threshold, the bill ensures that chronic offenders are held accountable and that communities are protected.
House File 2505- Bail and bond updates
House File 2505 strengthens Iowa’s bail and bond system by closing loopholes and setting clearer standards for pretrial release. Instead of relying on vague or inconsistent criteria, the bill creates a structured framework judges must follow when deciding who is released and under what conditions. This legislation ensures that bond amounts and release decisions reflect the actual risk a defendant poses to the community. The bill creates more consistency, more accountability, and a system that puts public safety first.
House File 2719- Judicial Transparency
This bill increases judicial transparency by requiring the State Commissioner of Elections to collect and publish clear, objective performance data on judges. Instead of relying on anecdotes, Iowans will have access to straightforward metrics like sentencing patterns, bond decisions, and reversal rates when evaluating judges in retention elections.
The goal is simple: more transparency, more accountability, and better-informed voters. When the public can see consistent, factual data about how judges perform on the bench, it strengthens trust in our courts and in the retention process itself.
I’m grateful for the opportunity to work hard on your behalf in Des Moines!
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Follow “Barker for Iowa” on social media channels to stay up to date on my work. Please reach out to me about any questions, concerns, or suggestions at brett.barker@legis.iowa.gov.


