Black lawmakers say Sessions unfit to be AG
Booker, Lewis testify at hearings
WASHINGTON — Black lawmakers said Wednesday that Sen. Jeff Sessions at times has shown hostility toward civil rights, making him unfit to be attorney general, as a 1986 letter from the widow of Martin Luther King Jr. surfaced strongly expressing opposition to the Alabama senator.
In the second day of confirmation hearings, New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, Sessions’ colleague, and Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., who was beaten when he marched for civil rights in the 1960s, warned that Sessions could move the country backward if confirmed.
Booker said the “arc of the universe does not just naturally curve toward justice; we must bend it,” and the country needs an attorney general who is determined to bend it.
“Sen. Sessions’ record does not speak to that desire, intention or will,” Booker said, noting his opposition to overhauling the criminal justice system and his positions on other issues affecting minority groups.
Lewis told the Senate Judiciary Committee that the country needs “someone who’s going to stand up, speak up and speak out for the people that need help, the people who have been discriminated against.”
And Louisiana Rep. Cedric Richmond, the chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, urged senators to reject Sessions’ eventual nomination because he has “advanced an agenda that will do great harm” to African-Americans.
The lawmakers’ criticism echoed Cornell Brooks, the head of the NAACP, who told the panel earlier in the day that the organization “firmly believes” Sessions is unfit to serve.
The Alabama Republican was rejected by the Judiciary Committee in 1986 for a federal judgeship amid accusations that he had called a black attorney “boy” — which he denied — and the NAACP and ACLU “un-American.”
The lawmakers’ testimony brought two days of confirmation hearings for Sessions to a close. He has solid support from the Senate’s Republican majority and some Democrats and is expected to win confirmation. But Democrats are using the hearings to try to show that Sessions — and Trump’s administration — won’t be committed to civil rights, a top priority of the Obama administration.