Rethugs Appoint Anti-Civil Rights Activist to Battle Obama’s Court Nominees

Filed in National by on May 4, 2009

Once again, the new and improved ‘Big Tent’ party shows its true colors (hint, it’s not ‘black’) by appointing Alabama’s William Sessions to be the ranking Rethug on the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Sessions has one of the most disgusting records on race that one could have. From an excellent 2002 profile  by Sarah Wildman:

Sessions entered national politics in the mid-’80s not as a politician but as a judicial nominee. Recommended by a fellow Republican from Alabama, then-Senator Jeremiah Denton, Sessions was Ronald Reagan’s choice for the U.S. District Court in Alabama in the early spring of 1986. Reagan had gotten cocky by then, as more than 200 of his uberconservative judicial appointees had been rolled out across the country without serious opposition (this was pre-Robert Bork). That is, until the 39-year-old Sessions came up for review.

Sessions was U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Alabama. The year before his nomination to federal court, he had unsuccessfully prosecuted three civil rights workers–including Albert Turner, a former aide to Martin Luther King Jr.–on a tenuous case of voter fraud. The three had been working in the “Black Belt” counties of Alabama, which, after years of voting white, had begun to swing toward black candidates as voter registration drives brought in more black voters. Sessions’s focus on these counties to the exclusion of others caused an uproar among civil rights leaders, especially after hours of interrogating black absentee voters produced only 14 allegedly tampered ballots out of more than 1.7 million cast in the state in the 1984 election. The activists, known as the Marion Three, were acquitted in four hours and became a cause celebre. Civil rights groups charged that Sessions had been looking for voter fraud in the black community and overlooking the same violations among whites, at least partly to help reelect his friend Senator Denton.

On its own, the case might not have been enough to stain Sessions with the taint of racism, but there was more. Senate Democrats tracked down a career Justice Department employee named J. Gerald Hebert, who testified, albeit reluctantly, that in a conversation between the two men Sessions had labeled the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) “un-American” and “Communist-inspired.” Hebert said Sessions had claimed these groups “forced civil rights down the throats of people.” In his confirmation hearings, Sessions sealed his own fate by saying such groups could be construed as “un-American” when “they involve themselves in promoting un-American positions” in foreign policy.

None of this history stopped Sessions’s political ascension. He was elected attorney general in 1994. Once in office, he was linked with a second instance of investigating absentee ballots and fraud that directly impacted the black community. He was also accused of not investigating the church burnings that swept the state of Alabama the year he became attorney general. But those issues barely made a dent in his 1996 Senate campaign, when Heflin retired and Sessions ran for his seat and won.

Sessions is a disgraceful reminder of anti-civil rights activity in the south. The fact that the Repukes have decided to make him the face of opposition to Obama’s court nominees simply shows that the Goposaurs are not serious about broadening the appeal of their party.

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  1. Sessions is base-approved. He’s voted correctly as far as the base is concerned.

  2. anonone says:

    This is excellent news.

  3. Nice try, but the Dems could not support Justice Roberts or Alito when Ginsberg who said prostitution was a woman’s right got widespread GOP support.

    Sen Sessions has been reelected several times and despite your baiting did not kill a woman in his car and not report the crime for over eight hours or have oral sex with a woman half his age and then lie to a grand jury.

    The Dems have been the attack dogs when it comes to the Supreme Court not the GOP.

    Mike Protack

  4. The standard for judging Supreme Court justices is whether they’ve had oral sex with a woman half their age?

    Racism – OK
    Oral sex – NO

    I wonder why Republicans are unpopular…

  5. johnny longtorso says:

    I wonder if scientists will ever isolate the “Blame Clinton/Kennedy” gene in Republicans.

  6. cassandra_m says:

    I hope they don’t. It is helping them look angry and stupid to the rest of the world, and that’s OK!

  7. anonone says:

    Ginsberg who said prostitution was a woman’s right got widespread GOP support

    “Widespread support” heh heh

    And why not?

    I am sure that Sen. Vitter (R-Adult Diaper) supported her.

    have oral sex with a woman half his age

    Jealousy is an ugly thing, Mike.

    did not kill a woman in his car

    You mean like Laura Bush killed someone with her car?

    By the way, Clinton was acquitted in his impeachment trial.

  8. cassandra_m says:

    Steve Benen reminds us that Sessions was at the center of the Alito Supreme Court business claiming that appointees should never be filibustered. He was also in favor of a majority vote to get candidates out of committee.

    Bet he doesn’t think any of this today.

  9. William Sessions made his bones on voter suppression. Keeping black people from voting, and prosecuting people who sought to ensure that blacks had the right to vote. Period.

    Protack’s increasingly-desparate attempts to, ‘bulo doesn’t know what exactly, defend the Rethugs, ‘bulo guesses, cannot mask that fact.

    He has been reelected by a buncha Alabama crackers, so, since they haven’t yet seceded, he has a right to his seat, of course.

    The Beast Who Slumbers guesses he was being too subtle for Prozack when he tried to explain that having someone like that serve as the face of the opposition to Obama’s court nominees was not exactly a way to attract anyone other than pro-segregationist whites to Mike’s party. And they’re already hunkered down there.

  10. ‘Bulo, I think the war for the GOP has been won by the ultra-conservative core. Protack is all in.