by
Walter Brasch
In his successful run to the presidency,
Donald Trump spent a lot of time talking about the Second Amendment and
defending gun ownership. He spent very little time talking about the other
amendments, other than to say he supported the Constitution. He knew his core
support came from those who could effortlessly repeat a phrase, “Donald Trump
supports my Second Amendment rights,” without knowing much more than that.
There’s probably a reason why Trump wasn’t
specific about the other rights—he doesn’t know much about the Constitution.
That became apparent this past week when he said he would jail anyone who
burned the flag. However, the Supreme Court, in Texas v. Johnson (1989), ruled that burning the flag is protected
by the First Amendment right of free speech, no matter how hateful or
unpatriotic it may seem. Trump’s tweet was soundly condemned by all media and
civil rights organizations.
Trump’s knowledge of the Constitution
isn’t as important as his attorney general’s enforcement of Trump’s political
beliefs. Most attorney generals have been apolitical; Trump’s nomination may
not be.
Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Alabama) will face
significant questioning by most Democrats and a few Republican senators during
confirmation hearings. Ronald Reagan withdrew his support for Sessions in 1986
after nominating him for a federal judgeship. The nomination had drawn heated
opposition by numerous groups , individuals, and four Department of Justice
lawyers over Sessions’ history of racially insensitive comments. Among comments
that Sessions made was that the NAACP, the
Southern Christian Leadership Conference, the ACLU, and the National Conference
of Churches were un-American.
Sessions says he isn’t a racist. Perhaps that’s accurate, but
let’s see what he said in 2014. In an uninformed opinion about the recruitment
of not-naturalized immigrants into the military, Sessions stated, “I just think in terms of who’s going
to be most likely to be a spy: somebody from Cullman, Alabama, or somebody from
Kenya?” Elaborating, he stated, “We don’t have a difficulty getting American
citizens to fill our military slots. That is unbelievable that in a time of
high unemployment and we get a lot of calls — ‘Help my son get in the military.
He’s been turned down, can he get in?’ So I just think this is not the right
thing to do right now.” However, an investigation conducted by the Kansas City Star revealed the problem
wasn’t that the military was turning down American citizens but that the
reduction of ground troops led to increased requirements for recruits and about
80 percent of American citizens who applied were rejected as unfit for service.
“Unfit” also applied to the
Klan, which Session says “was OK until I found out they smoked pot.” He claims
he was joking. But he wasn’t joking about his opinion of marijuana. In 2016, he
incorrectly stated, “Good
people don’t smoke marijuana.” Again elaborating on his main theme, the
four-term senator said, “We need grown-ups
in charge in Washington to say marijuana is not the kind of thing that ought to
be legalized, it ought not to be minimized, that it’s in fact a very real
danger.” He opposes sentence reduction and believes in seizing the assets
of those arrested for possession, even before those arrested are convicted, a
distinct civil rights violation to the Constitutional guarantee that persons
arrested are considered to be innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
He
opposes same-sex marriage, voted against repealing the military’s “Don’t Ask,
Don’t Tell” policy, and believes that the U.S. should be allowed to torture
suspected terrorists.
Sessions
was an early supporter of Trump’s proposal to ban immigration of Muslims to the
United States. He stated there was no vetting process for Syrian refugees, a
claim that wilts in face of the reality that it takes 18 to 24 months of
intensive investigation before immigrants are admitted to the U.S.
Sessions
also argued against the H-1B provision of the Immigration Act that allows
persons who possess significant skills are allowed admission to the U.S. if
there are not a sufficient number of Americans to fill those jobs. The H-1B provision
has often been used to allow physicians and medical workers into the U.S. In
the Senate’s Judicial Committee, Sessions delivered a 30 minute speech about
why there needed to be a ban. “Many people are radicalized after they enter,”
Sessions stated, again inaccurately, and then claimed, “How do we screen for
that possibility, if we cannot even ask about an applicant’s views on religion?
Would we forbid questions about politics? Or theology?” However, the
Constitution and Supreme Court interpretations of the Constitution are specific
in stating that there can be no religious test for immigrants—before or after
admission to the U.S.
An attorney general has wide latitude on
whom he or she prosecutes or doesn’t prosecute, or what terms are acceptable on
plea bargains. With Jeff Sessions as attorney general, there is every
probability that there will be an overhaul of career staff who are apolitical,
of the prosecution of certain crimes at the expense of other crimes, and the
refusal to pursue many civil rights violations.
[Dr. Brasch is an award-winning social
issues/investigative journalist who has covered government and politics for
four decades. His latest book is Fracking
America: Sacrificing Health and the Environment for Short-Term Economic Benefit.]
No comments:
Post a Comment