The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gillum, Abrams speak out against N.C. judicial nominee

‘Record of hostility’ should disqualify Farr, they say.

- By John Wagner

Andrew Gillum and Stacey Abrams, two black candidates who fell short in high-profile gubernator­ial races this month, spoke out Tuesday against President Donald Trump’s nominee for a North Carolina judgeship who previously worked to defend state laws ruled to have been discrimina­tory against African-Americans.

The involvemen­t of Gillum and Abrams — who ran in Florida and Georgia, respective­ly — underscore­d the national fight that has emerged over the nomination of Thomas Farr to a federal-district court seat in the Eastern District of North Carolina.

The Senate could vote on Farr’s nomination as early as this week, if Republican­s are able to round up enough votes in a chamber where all 49 Democrats have announced their opposition and an array of civil rights groups are vigorously opposing Trump’s pick.

“Thomas Farr’s record of hostility and disregard for fundamenta­l civil rights disqualifi­es him for a lifetime appointmen­t that will allow him to codify his discrimina­tory ideology into law,” Gillum and Abrams said in a joint statement. “North Carolina’s Eastern District — where most of the state’s African-Americans live — should be represente­d by a Bench that represents its diversity, not one that actively works to disenfranc­hise them.”

The Senate Judiciary Committee advanced Farr’s confirmati­on with a party-line vote back in January, and his nomination has the support of both of the state’s Republican senators, who argue that he has been unfairly maligned.

Republican­s in control of the North Carolina General Assembly hired Farr and others in his law firm to defend congressio­nal boundaries it approved in 2011. In 2016, a federal court struck down the map as a racial gerrymande­r.

Farr also helped defend a 2013 voter ID law that was considered one of the strictest in the nation. In addition to requiring residents to show identifica­tion before they could cast a ballot, the law also eliminated sameday voter registrati­on, eliminated seven days of early voting and put an end to outof-precinct voting.

A federal court ruled in 2016 that the primary purpose of North Carolina’s law wasn’t to stop voter fraud but rather to disenfranc­hise minority voters. The judges wrote that the law targeted African Americans “with almost surgical precision,” in part because the only acceptable forms of voter identifica­tion were ones disproport­ionately used by white people.

Farr has a “well qualified” rating from the American Bar Associatio­n and was previously nominated to the same post by former president George W. Bush.

Before the Judiciary Committee vote in January, Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., called Farr “one of the best legal minds in North Carolina” and said those opposing his nomination were “destroying a good man’s reputation.”

Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C., said Farr’s “wealth of experience will serve North Carolina well.”

After Republican­s signaled their intent to consider the nomination on the floor after a lengthy delay, Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., has repeatedly criticized Farr on Twitter and in public remarks.

During a floor speech Monday, Schumer called Farr the “chief cook and bottle washer” for the contested laws in North Carolina.

“I don’t care what your party is, and I don’t care what your political ideology is,” Schumer said. “How can you have this man in the court?”

Schumer also noted that Farr worked for the reelection campaign of then-Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., in 1990. The Justice Department alleged that about 120,000 postcards sent mostly to black voters during the race was intended to intimidate them from voting.

Farr has said he had no role in producing the postcards.

 ?? GETTY ?? Andrew Gillum, who fell short in Florida’s race for governor, joined Stacey Abrams, who lost Georgia’s race, in opposing President Trump’s pick for a North Carolina judiciary seat.
GETTY Andrew Gillum, who fell short in Florida’s race for governor, joined Stacey Abrams, who lost Georgia’s race, in opposing President Trump’s pick for a North Carolina judiciary seat.

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