Texarkana Gazette

Civil rights nominee offers assurances

-

WASHINGTON—The Washington labor lawyer tapped to be the Trump administra­tion’s top civil rights attorney offered assurances Wednesday that he is sensitive to voting rights and hate crimes, in the face of criticism of his record of defending large companies against discrimina­tion claims.

Rights groups have opposed Eric Dreiband’s nomination, citing his private sector work and uncertaint­y about his stances on key areas such as gay rights, criminal justice and policing. But his hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee was largely devoid of fireworks, and there are no apparent obstacles to his confirmati­on to lead the Justice Department’s vaunted civil rights division.

The division has always been a political hotbed and that’s especially been true under Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Under Sessions, the department changed positions to support a strict Texas voter ID law that a federal judge last month found discrimina­tes against minorities. The department also has backed off court-enforceabl­e improvemen­t plans for troubled police agencies and told local school districts they no longer must allow transgende­r students to use the bathrooms of their choice.

Dreiband revealed little about his views on those most pressing issues, promising only aggressive enforcemen­t of all civil rights laws.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States