U.S. Attorney General Barr says the left wants to tear down system
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[August 10, 2020]
By Nathan Layne
(Reuters) - U.S. Attorney General William
Barr mounted a partisan attack on the Democratic Party in an interview
that aired Sunday, claiming the left believes in "tearing down the
system" and pursues absolute victory as "a substitute for religion."
Barr also told a Fox News TV host he was worried that an increase in
mail-in voting could lead to a contested presidential election in
November, sounding in on an issue often raised by U.S. President Donald
Trump.
In an interview with conservative pundit Mark Levin, Barr said Democrats
had pulled away from classic liberal values and now were akin to the "Rousseauian
Revolutionary Party" aimed at destroying the institutions upon which the
country was built.
"They're not interested in compromise, they're not interested in
dialectic exchange of views. They're interested in total victory," Barr
said of the left. "It's a secular religion. It's a substitute for a
religion."
The comments come nearly two weeks after a contentious hearing before
the House Judiciary Committee in which Barr denied accusations he was
doing Trump's bidding by intervening in high-profile cases and sending
federal agents into cities.
Barr has come under fire from Democratic lawmakers for sending federal
officers to disperse protesters in Portland, Oregon, where some
demonstrators have attacked a federal courthouse and others have
gathered to speak out against racism and police brutality following the
May 25 death of George Floyd.
Barr said police have been unfairly maligned and targeted with violent
attacks during nationwide protests, and argued greater attention should
be paid to a recent surge in violence in some cities that has led to
numerous deaths of Black people.
He said he believed systemic racism existed, but that the "best example"
was in education, with public schools consistently failing inner-city
youth. He pointed to school choice - a policy endorsed by Trump - as one
solution to the problem.
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U.S. Attorney General William Barr testifies before the House
Judiciary Committee in the Congressional Auditorium at the U.S.
Capitol Visitors Center, in Washington, U.S., July 28, 2020. Chip
Somodevilla/Pool via REUTERS
"I believe Black lives matter, but I believe all Black lives matter.
I also believe that it's not just a matter of protecting their
safety from physical harm, it's also providing economic opportunity,
which this administration has done," Barr said.
Trump, who trails Democratic challenger Joe Biden in opinion polls,
has raised questions about the integrity of the November election
and he and his allies have proclaimed without evidence that expanded
voting by mail - sought by many due to the coronavirus pandemic -
will lead to widespread fraud.
When asked about the push to expand mail-in ballots, Barr said he
was "very worried about it."
He said he was fine with "individual cases" where people that have
difficulty making it to the polls apply for and receive a ballot in
the mail.
"But the idea that you, without any request from the voter, will
mail out your voting list, all these thousands and thousands of
ballots, is scary because most of those mailings go to a lot of
addresses where the people no longer live," Barr said. "They could
easily create a situation where there's going to be a contested
election."
(reporting by Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut; Editing by
Lincoln Feast.)
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