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In confirmation hearings for Jeff Sessions, the past is never past

It鈥檚 not unusual for a time decades previous to shadow a nominee, historians say. But charges of racism, like those leveled by opponents of attorney general nominee Sen. Jeff Sessions, are a unique category.

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Alex Brandon/AP
Attorney General-designate, Sen. Jeff Sessions, (R) of Alabama, testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington Tuesday at his confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee.

It was a telling moment in Tuesday鈥檚 hearing of Sen. Jeff Sessions to be America鈥檚 top law enforcement officer:

Just after his fellow southerner, Lindsey Graham (R) of South Carolina, asked him what it felt like to be labeled as 鈥渁 racist or a bigot,鈥 a cry erupted from the back of the cavernous, marbled hearing room.

鈥淪essions is a racist! This whole fascist regime needs to be stopped before they start!鈥 Capitol police hustled the protesters to the doors as they shouted a slogan that several times interrupted the hearings, 鈥淣o Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA.鈥

When quiet returned, the nominee answered his friend from the Palmetto State: To some people, nothing sounds worse than having a southern name (Jefferson Beauregard Sessions) and coming from south Alabama. Referring back to his 1986 Senate hearing when he was denied a federal judgeship because of racist allegations, he said he arrived at that hearing unprepared to deal with an allegation that wasn鈥檛 true.

鈥淚 hope my tenure in this body has shown you that the caricature that was created of me is not accurate. It wasn鈥檛 accurate then, it鈥檚 not accurate now,鈥 said Sessions, who has served in the Senate for 20 years 鈥 including on this very committee.

On the first day of his two-day hearing, the past came roaring up to the present, raising a question from more than 30 years ago: Is the Republican from Alabama a racist?

It鈥檚 a question of character 鈥 and actions 鈥 at a time when many minorities and others are anxious about a Trump administration. They fear that Attorney General Sessions would not enforce civil rights laws such as the Voting Rights Act or that he would deport 800,000 children of unauthorized immigrants known as 鈥淒reamers.鈥 They were granted deferred deportation because of an executive action by President Obama that both Senator Sessions and President-elect Donald Trump believe is unconstitutional.

For critics who attended the hearing, Sessions could do little to assuage their concerns.聽But in that way, the hearing presented a portrait of two different takes on racism in America today 鈥 supporters who vouched for the goodness of the man, and detractors who said聽alleged comments from the past and voting records from the present suggest he is out of touch with minority communities.

鈥淣o matter what Sessions is saying about 鈥榠t is not true who we think he is,鈥 we think we know who he is. And we think that he cannot escape his history. And he certainly cannot escape some of these bad votes he has taken as a senator,鈥 said Rep. Maxine Waters, an African-American Democrat from California, who was accompanying black ministers from around the country to the hearing.

Shadows of the past

It鈥檚 not unusual for decades-old controversies to shadow a nominee, says Calvin Mackenzie, an expert on presidential nominations. He points to Elliot Richardson. The four-time cabinet secretary was made famous as the attorney general who refused President Nixon鈥檚 order to fire the special prosecutor in the Watergate scandal.

At multiple confirmation hearings, Richardson was asked about drunken driving incidents when a young man in his college years. He fully admitted to them, chalking them up to 鈥渋mmaturity.鈥 He also thoroughly denounced the inference that he was an alcoholic.

鈥淣o matter how old he was, no matter how distinctively he had served the country, every time he was at a hearing, those things popped back up,鈥 says Mr. Mackenzie, of Colby College in Waterville, Maine.

But charges of racism are in another category. They are a 鈥渟erious and troublesome reflection on a nominee鈥檚 character and on his fitness for public service,鈥 writes Mackenzie in his book, 鈥淭he Politics of Presidential Appointments.鈥 They require a high burden of proof, he writes, adding that 鈥渢he notion that a man or woman is a racist is subjective at best.鈥

And so it proved at Tuesday鈥檚 hearing.

Sessions deviated from his prepared remarks to meet the charge at the very beginning of the hearing.

He went back to a voter fraud case he prosecuted as a United States attorney in Alabama and for which he has been criticized. 鈥淭he voter fraud case my office prosecuted was in response to pleas from African-Americans, incumbent elected officials,鈥 he explained.

He also pointed out that he prosecuted a member of the Ku Klux Klan who had murdered a black teenager. Part of the 1986 accusations that sunk him was a comment he made about the KKK, which he had characterized as a joke. 鈥淚 abhor the Klan and what it represents,鈥 he said on Tuesday.

He also reached out to women and the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community.聽

鈥淚 understand the demands for justice and fairness made by the LGBT community. I understand the lifelong scars born by women who are victims of assault and abuse,鈥 he continued.

In introducing him, Sen. Susan Collins (R) of Maine 鈥 arguably the most moderate Republican in the Senate 鈥 pointed out his bipartisan work in the Senate to reduce racial disparity in crack cocaine sentencing, prison rape, and child abuse.

In 1980, she pointed out, he appointed the first African-American member of the Mobile Lions Club. As the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, he appointed the first African-American chief counsel to advise Republicans.

鈥淭hese are not the actions of an individual who is motivated by racial animus,鈥 she said.

Senator Collins added that the late Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, who voted against Sessions in 1986, once said that was the one vote he regretted, because he had since found through serving with Sessions that he is an 鈥渆galitarian.鈥

Questions about the present聽

But Sessions鈥檚 critics did not buy these arguments.聽Democratic senators went through his votes and his most controversial positions.

Sen. Patrick Leahy (D) of Vermont, the former chairman of the Judiciary Committee, asked him why he voted against the Violence Against Women Act that is now the law of the land.

Sessions answered that he had voted for previous bills but that he didn鈥檛 like the set-up for Native American tribal courts in the final version.

Senator Leahy asked him why he opposed extending hate crime protections to the LGBT community.

The nominee answered that the states were effectively prosecuting those crimes.

Leahy asked whether he agreed with President-elect Trump鈥檚 proposed ban on Muslims coming to the United States.

He replied that Trump鈥檚 proposal would be to ban people from terrorist countries. Sessions does not support the idea that Muslims should be denied admission to the US, he said.

Similarly, the nominee addressed pointed questions by the committee鈥檚 ranking member, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D) of California. While he does not believe the Supreme Court decision establishing legalized abortion is constitutional, he acknowledged it is 鈥渟ettled鈥 law. 鈥淚t deserves respect and I would respect it and follow it.鈥

He would also 鈥渇ollow鈥 the court鈥檚 decision upholding same-sex marriage.

In questioning by Senator Graham, Sessions reaffirmed his view that the Dreamers executive order is constitutionally 鈥渜uestionable,鈥 and that Congress needed to fix the law. Later, he said the attorney general needs to enforce the law, but then admitted that the federal government does not have the resources to seek out and remove all those in the country illegally.

Senator Feinstein, in her opening remarks, highlighted his 鈥渧ery conservative agenda鈥 throughout his Senate career, including a voting against efforts to prohibit waterboarding as torture. He later described the technique as 鈥渁bsolutely improper and illegal.鈥

Racism, or just conservatism?

Feinstein鈥檚 description of his agenda raises a question: Is critics鈥 problem with Sessions racism, or is it his staunch conservatism?

Congresswoman Waters sees no such distinction.

鈥淲hen you look at public policy that has been supported, initiated, by really right-wing conservatives, it always harms people of color and minorities. Always,鈥 she said.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 just separate it and say, 鈥榃ell, this is just conservatism, this is not racism, this is not harming other people.鈥 It is not true. It really does.鈥

It was a viewpoint strongly shared by the African-American ministers who came to the hearing, and it is hardly a settled matter.

But Sessions sought to gain their trust by vowing to uphold the law for all. 聽

鈥淚 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. I have witnessed it.鈥澛

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