Saturday, January 14, 2017

John Lewis Puts Race at Center of Jeff Sessions Hearing


Rep. John Lewis Testifies on the Nomination of Senator Sessions to be Attorney General
Video Witnesses Testify For and Against Jeff Sessions

Colleagues and former colleagues, including Senator Cory Booker, testified for and against the nomination of Senator Jeff Sessions as U.S. attorney general.

By SUSAN JOAN ARCHER. Photo by Al Drago/The New York Times. Watch in Times Video

WASHINGTON Senator Jeff Sessions, the Alabama Republican nominated for attorney general, came under sharp attack from black leaders Wednesday over his record on minorities, as Representative John Lewis of Georgia, a luminary of the civil rights movement, charged that he could set back racial progress by decades.

We need someone as attorney general whos going to look out for all of us, and not just some of us, mr. lewis, a Democrat, told the Senate Judiciary Committee on the second and final day of testimony for Mr. Sessionss nomination.

The emotional testimony from Mr. Lewis and other black leaders provided some dramatic moments at the hearing, but there was no indication that it would slow Mr. Sessionss confirmation in the Senate, which appears all but certain.

Republican members on the committee came to his defense at the hearing and said that he was being unfairly tarnished over accusations of racial insensitivity that have dogged him since the 1980s.

They produced witnesses, including several black conservatives, who vouched for Mr. Sessionss character and professionalism and said they were confident that he would enforce the law no matter what his personal views were.

Larry D. Thompson, a friend of Mr. Sessionss who worked with him in the 1980s when both were federal prosecutors, said the senator had a commitment to both strong law enforcement and equal justice for all.

The days testimony highlighted the strong racial undertones of Mr. Sessionss nomination. Three decades ago, the Senate rejected Mr. Sessions for a federal judgeship over questions about his failed prosecution of African-Americans in a fraud case and racially insensitive comments he was reported to have made. He acknowledged using words like un-American to describe the N.A.A.C.P.

Black leaders say that those accusations still resonate with them and that his votes as a senator in more recent years in opposition to a number of civil rights bills have given them more reason to question his record.

About a dozen members of the Congressional Black Caucus, along with civil rights leaders, turned out at Wednesdays hearing in support of Mr. Lewis and two other black Democrats Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey and Representative Cedric Richmond of Louisiana as they voiced their opposition to Mr. Sessionss nomination.

Mr. Booker broke with Senate tradition by testifying against a fellow senator, a decision that he cast as a matter of conscience and country.

He alluded to Mr. Sessionss opposition to immigration and his support for voter-identification laws that disproportionately affect minorities and the poor.

He will be expected to defend voting rights, but his record indicates that he wont, Mr. Booker said. He will be expected to defend the rights of immigrants and affirm their human dignity, but his record indicates that he wont.

Mr. Lewis, who protested segregation alongside the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and was beaten severely during a march in Selma, Ala., said Mr. Sessionss pledge to enforce law and order harked back to the era in which he grew up.

Those who are committed to equal justice in our society wonder whether Senator Sessionss call for law and order will mean today what it meant in Alabama when I was coming up back then, Mr. Lewis said.

Mr. Lewis urged senators to focus on those views. It doesnt matter how Senator Sessions may smile, how friendly he may be, how he may speak to you, he said.

Democrats challenging Mr. Sessionss nomination also released a letter from 103 black ministers and religious leaders, who wrote that the senators unswerving hostility to the very rights he would be tasked with protecting had made him unfit to be attorney general.

Republicans, however, countered with their own testimonial. Just as Mr. Lewis was about to testify, Trump transition team members circulated photographs showing Mr. Sessions and Mr. Lewis marching together over the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma to commemorate the 50th anniversary of a confrontation there between civil rights marchers and the police.

Continue reading the main story

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNGR4dl4o2aEkDYkJtDz9KOTRuHtuA&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52779336060162&ei=Y3B6WOjREYjKqQLMz4CwDg&url=https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/11/us/politics/john-lewis-jeff-sessions-confirmation-hearing.html

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