Times Colonist

Loyalists named to Trump cabinet

Statements by three key appointees about African Americans, Muslims raise concerns

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

WASHINGTON — His new attorney general once lost a job over alleged racism against blacks. His new national-security adviser not only blasts Muslims, but has also reportedly been paid recently by the government­s of Russia and Turkey.

Donald Trump made one thing clear Friday: He will appoint loyalists to top positions — controvers­y be damned.

Trump has named as his attorney general Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III, the first senator to support his presidenti­al bid. Sessions would become the top law-enforcemen­t official in the country. An immigratio­n hawk today, Jeff Sessions first made national news when allegation­s of racism cost him a judgeship.

“I am not a racist. I am not insensitiv­e to blacks. I have supported civil rights activity in my state,” he testified before the Senate in 1986, as it rejected his judicial nomination. “I detest the [Ku Klux] Klan.”

That’s not what witnesses told his Senate hearing. They said the Alabama lawyer called the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People un-American, referred to a white lawyer working with black clients as a race-traitor, and joked about supporting the Ku Klux Klan until learning its members smoked pot.

He was rejected. One wellknown committee member, the late Ted Kennedy, called it inconceiva­ble that a person of Sessions’ attitude was qualified to be a U.S. attorney — let alone be a federal judge.

Three decades later, Trump has made him the country’s top justice official. In defence of the appointmen­t, Trump’s entourage Friday pointed to more recent comments from a Senate colleague.

Republican-turned-Democrat Arlen Specter later said that of the 10,000 votes he cast as a senator, this was the one he regretted: “My vote against candidate Sessions for the federal court was a mistake … I have since found that Sen. Sessions is egalitaria­n.”

Sessions might have inherited his first and middle names from the southern confederac­y — president Jefferson Davis and general P.G.T. Beauregard. Yet he has spoken frequently in favour of another figure: civil-rights activist Rosa Parks. Sessions helped get money for a library in honour of the civil-rights hero from his state, as well as a congressio­nal gold medal.

He could still face another confirmati­on fight.

While Republican­s have just enough votes to confirm him, opposition groups are hoping to twist some arms. One Republican congressma­n, Justin Amash, tweeted his concern about the appointmen­t.

The NAACP called it an unfathomab­le pick — describing him as a longtime opponent of civil-rights measures.

“It is unimaginab­le that he could be entrusted to serve as … chief law enforcemen­t officer,” the group said in a statement.

“This is yet another signal from the incoming administra­tion that it is not only prepared to turn its back on equality, it is actively working to continue to sow division and undo decades of progress.”

Trump’s other controvers­ial pick — for national security adviser — doesn’t need congressio­nal confirmati­on.

Retired general Michael Flynn was the highest-ranking former military figure to back Trump. He left the military after falling out of favour with the Obama administra­tion, partly over his calls for a more aggressive approach to fighting terrorism.

His use of language also ran counter to an administra­tion hoping to build alliances with Muslims — not antagonize them. Flynn takes a different approach. He recently tweeted a video that presented Muslims as a global threat, telling his followers, “Fear of Muslims is rational: please forward this to others: the truth fears no questions.”

Trump also named Mike Pompeo to head the CIA. Pompeo is a conservati­ve Republican from Kansas and a strong critic of Obama’s nuclear deal with Iran. A three-term congressma­n, he graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point and from Harvard Law School.

Pompeo has said that Muslim leaders are “potentiall­y complicit” in terrorist attacks if they do not denounce violence conducted in the name of Islam.

Speaking at the Republican convention last summer, Flynn expressed outrage at the approach of the Obama White House. He also encouraged the crowd as it chanted about arresting Hillary Clinton: “That’s right! Lock her up,” Flynn chimed in.

Because Flynn’s position does not require a confirmati­on hearing, senators will not immediatel­y have the opportunit­y to question him about reported recent payments from the government­s of Turkey and Russia.

He has admitted to being paid for an appearance by the Kremlinrun news outlet Russia Today — but hasn’t disclosed the dollar amount. He also sat next to Vladimir Putin at a dinner in Moscow last year honouring the news outlet.

Friday’s appointmen­ts drew a celebrator­y blog post from David Duke, the former imperial wizard of the Ku Klux Klan: “We must demand the protection of the civil rights of all Americans including white people! … Bravo President Trump! Some Great First Steps!”

When a journalist tweeted his frustratio­n that people were giving Duke attention, a former senior adviser to President Barack Obama, Dan Pfeiffer, replied: “Disagree. We should all ask ourselves what it means that we have a president-elect that causes white supremacis­ts to squeal with joy.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Incoming CIA director Mike Pompeo, left, U.S. attorney general Jeff Sessions and national security adviser Michael Flynn.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Incoming CIA director Mike Pompeo, left, U.S. attorney general Jeff Sessions and national security adviser Michael Flynn.
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