Sessions Dismisses Racism Claim, Hints at What Trump DOJ Might Look Like

United States Congress(WASHINGTON) — Donald Trump’s pick to become the next U.S. attorney general vehemently disputed “amazing” allegations that he harbors racial bias, insisting to a Senate panel Tuesday that decades-old accusations suggesting he may support the Ku Klux Klan are absolutely false and that the nation “can never go back” to its dark days of legal discrimination.

“I abhor the Klan and what it represents, and its hateful ideology,” Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., told the Senate Judiciary Committee, which is holding confirmation hearings this week to consider Session’s nomination to lead the Justice Department.

He walked into the Senate hearing room Tuesday morning to shouting from some protesters dressed in Ku Klux Klan costumes, and others holding signs saying, “Stand Against Xenophobia” and “Love Trumps Hate.” Sessions seemed unfazed, and many in the room cheered as the protesters were removed. At least two other protesters interrupted his opening remarks, one shouting, “No Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA.”

In his statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday morning, the Alabama senator vowed to tell incoming president Trump “no” when necessary. He defended police and law enforcement officers across the country who have been “unfairly maligned” in recent years, and he insisted he understands the struggle for justice by “African-American brothers and sisters” and from the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.

Hours into Tuesday’s hearing, Sessions faced tough questions over his record on civil rights and his plan for cooling tensions between law enforcement and the communities they serve.

Sessions, 70, has faced significant criticism from top Democrats and some civil rights groups over decades-old allegations that he made racist remarks when he was a U.S. Attorney in Alabama. On Tuesday, he dismissed the allegations as outright false or taken out of context.

“I hope my tenure in this body shows you that the caricature of me wasn’t accurate,” Sessions told senators. “It wasn’t accurate then, and it’s not accurate [now.”

The chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, said Sessions’ 20 years in the Senate mean, “We know him well.”

“He is a man of honor and integrity, dedicated to the faithful and fair enforcement of the law, who knows well and deeply respects the Department of Justice and its role,” Grassley said in his own opening remarks, noting that as U.S. attorney in Alabama during the 1980s, Sessions “oversaw the investigation of Klansman Francis Hays for the brutal abduction and murder of a black teenager, Michael Donald.”

During what may have been the most uncomfortable moments for Sessions during the first half of the day, Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., pressed Sessions on whether he has “misrepresented” or “inflated” his role in prosecuting civil rights cases and standing up for minorities when U.S. attorney. In particular, Franken took aim at Sessions’ claim that he “personally handled” several cases, suggesting the extent of his involvement in those cases may have just been signing charging documents.

Sessions fired back, saying he not only signed the documents but “provided assistance and guidance” to attorneys working on the cases, and Sessions “attempted to be as effective as I could be in helping them be successful in these historic cases.”

“I and had an open door policy with them and cooperated with them on these cases,” he added.

Sessions Stakes Position on Same-Sex Marriage

Sessions also vowed in his opening remarks, “I understand the demands for justice and fairness made by the LGBT community.”

But the top Democrat on the Senate committee, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., called Sessions’ record “extremely conservative” and emphasized that the next attorney general must enforce the law “equally for all Americans,” not advocate for his own beliefs.

She noted that he has taken what she called “deeply concerning” stances, including support for keeping people out of the United States based on their religion, support for “illegal” waterboarding of terrorism suspect, and opposition to gay-rights legislation.

Other critics have also pointed to Sessions’ dismay at the Supreme Court’s 2015 ruling that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry, and his opposition to the Matthew Shepard Act, expanding the definition of “hate crimes” to include attacks on people based on their sexual orientation, gender or disability.

Asked during Tuesday’s hearing whether he believes the issue of same-sex marriage is settled — now that the Supreme Court has ruled that gay and lesbian couples can marry — Sessions said he will “follow that decision.” Sessions explained that he opposed the Matthew Shepard Act based on “a concern that it appeared that these cases were being prosecuted effectively in state court,” but since it has become law and “the Congress has spoken, you can be sure that i will enforce it.”

Where Sessions Stands on Clinton

During her opening remarks, Feinstein cited Trump’s promise on the campaign trail that his attorney general would appoint a special prosecutor to investigate Hillary Clinton.

“That’s not what an attorney general does,” Feinstein said. “The attorney general does not investigate or prosecute at the direction of the president.”

For Sessions’ part, he vowed Tuesday that as attorney general, he would recuse himself from any matters related to Clinton.

On the campaign trail, Sessions spoke out against Clinton over her use of a private email server as secretary of state, which became the subject of an FBI criminal investigation.

Sessions, whose testimony was interrupted by protesters several times today, noted that the presidential campaign was “contentious” and that he made several comments about Clinton’s potential criminal culpability.

“I do believe that that could place my objectivity in question … [so] I think the proper thing would be to recuse myself,” Sessions told senators.

Violent Crime ‘Cannot Continue’

Much of Sessions’ opening remarks Tuesday focused on the “heroin epidemic” across America and the jump in violent crime in certain U.S. cities, including record-setting murders and shootings in Chicago last year.

“These trends cannot continue,” he said. “It is a fundamental civil right to be safe in your home and your community … It will be my priority to confront these crises vigorously, effectively, and immediately.”

At the same time, Sessions vowed to support state and local law enforcement across the country, calling recent attacks on police in the line of duty “a wake-up call” and recognizing the officers killed in the line of duty in Florida Monday, whose murderer is still the target of a massive manhunt.

“That is the kind of thing that too often happens,” he said, adding that “there is virtually no defense” for assaulting a police officer and recent criticism of law enforcement is making matters worse.

“In the last several years, law enforcement as a whole has been unfairly maligned and blamed for the actions of a few bad actors and for allegations about police that were not true,” he said. “I do believe that we are failing to appreciate police officers who place their lives at risk. … We need to be sure that when we criticize law officers, it is narrowly focused on the right basis for criticism. And to smear whole departments places those officers at greater risk.”

‘Caricature of Me in 1986 Was Not Correct’

Many Democrats have expressed concern over testimony during Session’s confirmation hearing for a federal judgeship in 1986, when some accused Sessions of calling a white civil rights lawyer a “disgrace to his race” and dubbed some actions by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People “un-American.”

“After four days of hearings and extensive testimony, Sessions’ nomination was rejected by a Republican-controlled Senate Judiciary Committee. He was too extreme for Republicans in 1986,” Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., wrote in the Boston Globe Sunday. “Now that he is nominated to be attorney general, we will see if the same person is still too extreme for Republicans.”

Leahy, until recently the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said “Sessions has repeatedly stood in the way of efforts to promote and protect Americans’ civil rights.”

But Sessions Tuesday said, “This caricature of me in 1986 was not correct. I conducted myself honorably and properly at that time,” and “I did not harbor the animosities … that I was accused of – I did not.”

Sessions later described how growing up in the South, he saw discrimination first-hand and had “no doubt” that it hurt many other Southerners.

“I know that was wrong. I know we need to do better. We can never go back,” Sessions said.

“I deeply understand the history of civil rights and the horrendous impact that relentless and systemic discrimination and the denial of voting rights has had on our African-American brothers and sisters,” he insisted.

He also promised that politics will play no role in his Justice Department.

“The Office of the Attorney General of the United States is not a political position, and anyone who holds it must have total fidelity to the laws and the Constitution of the United States,” Sessions said Tuesday.

Russian Hacking and More Trump-Related FBI Investigations

Asked Tuesday whether he believed the U.S. intelligence community’s unanimous conclusion that the Russian government was behind a series cyber-attacks aimed at impacting the presidential election, Sessions said, “I have no reason to doubt that, and have no reason to believe otherwise.” He said he is “sure” the FBI’s conclusions blaming Russia were “honorably reached,” and he said “it is appropriate for a nation to retaliate against” government-sponsored hacks.

But he said he only knows “what the media says about” the pre-election attacks, and he indicated he was deferring a final opinion until he can be briefed by the FBI.

Later in the hearing, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, R-R.I., asked Sessions whether he will allow the Justice Department and FBI to continue investigating Russian connections, even those probes lead to the Trump campaign or Trump associates. Sessions said, “If there are laws violated and can be prosecuted, you’ll have to handle that in an appropriate way.”

But, he added, “the problem may turn out to be” that, like the huge hack of the U.S. Office of Personnel management carried out on behalf of the Chinese government, such matters may be best handled at a political level.

Copyright © 2017, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on email
Email
Share on print
Print