Divided U.S. Senate confirms Vanita Gupta to No. 3 job at Justice
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[April 22, 2021]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -A divided U.S. Senate
on Wednesday voted to confirm Vanita Gupta as the first woman of color
to serve in the No. 3 job at the Justice Department, a role at the
forefront of the department's renewed efforts to combat systemic racism
in policing.
Gupta won confirmation as President Joe Biden's associate attorney
general in a final vote of 51-49. Only one Republican - Lisa Murkowski
of Alaska - voted to confirm her, saying she felt Gupta was personally
committed to combating injustice.
"I have looked at her record. I have had an extensive sit-down with her.
I'm impressed with not only her professional credentials ... but the
passion that she carries with her with the work that she performs,"
Murkowski said.
Gupta has faced a fraught confirmation process amid attacks by
right-wing groups and Senate Republicans who have criticized her on
everything from prior statements she has made on social media to her
stock holdings in a company accused of selling a key ingredient used to
make heroin in Mexico.
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Vanita Gupta, U.S. President-elect Joe Biden's nominee to be
associate attorney general, speaks as Biden announces his Justice
Department nominees at his transition headquarters in Wilmington,
Delaware, U.S., January 7, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
"This nomination has revealed a lengthy trail of
radical claims and hasty backtracks," the Senate's top Republican,
Mitch McConnell, said on Wednesday.
As associate attorney general at the Justice Department, Gupta will
play a pivotal role in supervising the department's civil rights
work, including an investigation announced by Attorney General
Merrick Garland on Wednesday into policing practices in Minneapolis
following the murder of George Floyd..
She will also be involved with overseeing the department's civil,
antitrust and environment and natural resources divisions.
Gupta served as acting assistant attorney general of the Civil
Rights Division during the Obama administration, during which time
she oversaw high-profile investigations into systemic abuses by
police departments in Baltimore and Ferguson, Missouri.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Leslie Adler and Sonya
Hepinstall)
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