Trump's choice for U.S. attorney general
says he can stand up to him
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[January 11, 2017]
By Julia Edwards Ainsley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President-elect
Donald Trump's pick for attorney general, Jeff Sessions, promised on
Tuesday to stand up to Trump, his close ally and future boss, saying he
would oppose a ban on Muslims entering the country and enforce a law
against waterboarding even though he voted against the measure.
Questioned for 10-1/2 hours by a U.S. Senate committee responsible for
confirming his appointment, Sessions, a U.S. senator from Alabama,
distanced himself from comments he had made defending Trump from
criticism over a 2005 video that emerged in October showing Trump
boasting about grabbing women's genitals.
At the time, Sessions told The Weekly Standard magazine he would not
characterize the behavior as sexual assault. He later said the comments
were taken out of context. Asked on Tuesday whether "grabbing a woman by
her genitals without consent is ... sexual assault," he replied:
"Clearly, it would be."
With 10 days to go before Trump takes office, Sessions, 70, was the
first Cabinet nominee to face questioning. He appeared before the Senate
Judiciary Committee. Trump's pick to run the Department of Homeland
Security, retired Marine Corps General John Kelly, later went before the
Homeland Security Committee.
As attorney general, Sessions would serve as the top U.S. law
enforcement officer and be responsible for giving unbiased legal advice
to the president and executive agencies.
With that in mind, lawmakers from both Trump's Republican Party and the
Democratic Party sought to establish how closely Sessions hewed to Trump
positions and whether he could put aside his staunchly conservative
political positions to enforce laws he may personally oppose.
A senator since 1997, Sessions was widely expected to be confirmed by
the Republican-controlled Senate.
Protesters accusing Sessions of having a poor record on human rights
interrupted the Capitol Hill proceedings several times.
MUSLIM BAN
Sessions said he would not support banning anyone from the United States
on the basis of religion and that Trump's intentions were to restrict
people from countries harboring terrorists, not all Muslims. Elected on
Nov. 8, Trump at one point campaigned on a proposal to temporarily ban
Muslims from entering the country.
Sessions said he favored "higher intensity of vetting" for refugees
seeking to enter the United States from countries that harbor terrorists
but that he would oppose ending the U.S. refugee program.
He also said he would enforce a 2015 law that outlawed waterboarding
terrorism suspects even if it meant resisting Trump. The senator said he
had voted against the law, believing those in high positions in the
military and intelligence community should be able to do so.
During the campaign, Trump said waterboarding, which simulates drowning
and is widely regarded as torture, was an effective technique and vowed
to bring it back and make it "a hell of a lot worse." More recently
Trump has said retired Marine Corps General James Mattis, his nominee
for secretary of defense, had persuasively argued against it.
Sessions said he would enforce laws upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court,
even those he disagreed with, such as decisions making abortion and
same-sex marriage legal.
CLINTON EMAILS
Sessions said the comments he made during the 2016 presidential campaign
about Democrat Hillary Clinton's email practices and charitable
foundation would cloud the perception of impartiality if the Justice
Department continued investigating Clinton. He said he would recuse
himself and favored a special prosecutor to carry out any future
investigations.
Trump, who defeated Clinton, said during the campaign that if elected,
he would ask his attorney general to appoint a special prosecutor to see
that Clinton go to prison for her use of a private email server while
she was secretary of state and her relationship with her family's
charitable foundation.
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Sen. Jeff Sessions
(R-AL) looks up during a Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation
hearing for his nomination to become U.S. attorney general on
Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., January 10, 2017. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque
Sessions said he agreed with Trump in opposing Democratic President
Barack Obama's executive action that granted temporary protection to
immigrant children brought to the country illegally by their parents
and would not oppose overturning it.
Sessions, representing the deeply conservative Southern state of
Alabama, has long opposed legislation that provides a path to
citizenship for immigrants. He has also been a close ally of groups
seeking to restrict legal immigration by placing limits on visas
used by companies to hire foreign workers.
Sessions said he would be more aggressive in investigating and
prosecuting abuses of the H-1B visa program, which he said allows
companies to discriminate against American workers by hiring
foreigners.
As head of the Justice Department, the attorney general oversees the
immigration court system that decides whether immigrants are
deported or granted asylum or some other kind of protection.
Sessions renewed his criticism of the Obama administration for not
being tougher on countries that refuse to take back criminal
migrants ordered deported from the United States.
A key plank of Trump's election campaign was his pledge to deport
illegal immigrants and build a wall along the U.S. border with
Mexico.
Kelly told his hearing a physical barrier on its own is not enough
to keep people and drugs from illegally entering the United States.
In written testimony, Kelly said that "rapidly processing" and
deporting immigrants in "significant numbers" would deter future
illegal migration.
The U.S. immigration court system has a backlog of over 500,000
cases awaiting a decision on deportation, asylum or some other kind
of protection. Many migrants arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border are
given a notice to appear in court one to three years in the future.
DEFENSE AGAINST RACISM
Before the Judiciary Committee, Sessions several times defended
himself against charges of racism. He said allegations that he
harbored sympathies toward the Ku Klux Klan, a violent white
supremacist organization, were false.
"I abhor the Klan and what it represents and its hateful ideology,"
Sessions said in his opening remarks.
Sessions was denied confirmation to a federal judgeship in 1986
after allegations emerged that he made racist remarks, including
testimony that he called an African-American prosecutor "boy," an
allegation Sessions denied.
Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein said the Senate Judiciary
Committee had received letters from 400 civil rights organizations
opposing his confirmation to the country's top law enforcement post.
(Reporting by Julia Edwards Ainsley; Additional reporting by David
Alexander, Eric Beech, Sarah Lynch, Dustin Volz and Ian Simpson;
Editing by Howard Goller and Peter Cooney)
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