Republican Senator Cotton criticized for 'necessary evil' slavery
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[July 28, 2020]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican
U.S. Senator Tom Cotton came under pressure over published comments in
which he said America's founders viewed slavery as a "necessary evil."
Cotton, seen as a possible 2024 presidential candidate, made the
comments in an interview with the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette while
attacking the New York Times 1619 Project's effort to make slavery a
focal point of American history for U.S. schools.
"As the Founding Fathers said, it was the necessary evil upon which the
union was built, but the union was built in a way, as Lincoln said, to
put slavery on the course to its ultimate extinction," Cotton said.
Launched last year to coincide with the 400th anniversary of the arrival
of African slaves on America's shores, the New York Times 1619 Project
would place the consequences of slavery and the contributions of
African-Americans at the center of U.S. history. Cotton wants to
withhold federal tax money from an elementary and secondary school
curriculum promoted by the project.
Criticism of Cotton's remark was swift.
"If chattel slavery — heritable, generational, permanent, race-based
slavery where it was legal to rape, torture, and sell human beings for
profit — were a 'necessary evil' as @TomCottonAR says, it's hard to
imagine what cannot be justified if it is a means to an end," tweeted
Nikole Hannah-Jones, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who launched
the 1619 Project.
Robert Reich, who was U.S. Labor secretary under former President Bill
Clinton, sought to tie Cotton's remarks to the 2020 election battle for
control of the Senate.
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Senator Tom Cotton (R-AR) questions David Marcus, head of Facebook's
Calibra (digital wallet service), during testimony before a Senate
Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on "Examining
Facebook's Proposed Digital Currency and Data Privacy
Considerations" on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., July 16, 2019.
REUTERS/Erin Scott/File Photo
"This, my friends, is today's GOP. Make sure they lose control of
the Senate on November 3. In fact, make sure they lose control of
everything. They've lost the right to govern," Reich said on
Twitter.
But the Arkansas Republican, who is running for reelection this
year, dismissed news coverage that he had described slavery as a
necessary evil.
"This is the definition of fake news," Cotton wrote on Twitter. "I
said that *the Founders viewed slavery as a necessary evil*."
In response, Hannah-Jones tweeted: "You said, quote: 'As the
Founding Fathers said, it was the necessary evil upon which the
union was built.' That 'as' denotes agreement."
The New York Times came under criticism earlier this year for
publishing a column by Cotton urging the federal government to use
the military to put down street protests over police violence and
racial injustice that led to the opinion editor's resignation.
(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Scott Malone, Jonathan Oatis
and Howard Goller)
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