Institute for Legal, Legislative and Educational Action
The ongoing delays before a final vote on Jeff Sessions’s nomination for attorney general should give vulnerable Senate Democrats extra time to bite their nails.
Their leaders and donors expect them to oppose the Republican senator from Alabama. But many voters in their home states, which Donald J. Trump won, want them to support the president’s choice to run the Justice Department.
Adding to these senators’ anxieties, the National Rifle Association and National Sheriffs’ Association endorsed Sessions and announced that their legislative report cards will include the yeas and nays on his confirmation. Voters in these Republican-leaning states will scrutinize these ratings and weigh them seriously before going to the polls in November 2018.
Of the 33 Senate seats up for grabs in the next mid-term election, Democrats must defend 23. Some of these are held by Democratic stalwarts in Left-wing states — Maryland’s Ben Cardin and California’s Dianne Feinstein, for example, have little to fear. But ten other Democrats are from states that President Trump just won, including Wisconsin’s Tammy Baldwin, Ohio’s Sherrod Brown, Pennsylvania’s Bob Casey, Florida’s Bill Nelson, and Michigan’s Debbie Stabenow. Five more come from states won by Trump last November and by GOP nominee Mitt Romney in 2012: These even more precarious Democrats are Indiana’s Joe Donnelly, North Dakota’s Heidi Heitkamp, West Virginia’s Joe Manchin, Missouri’s Claire McCaskill, and Montana’s Jon Tester.
It might have been easy for these donkeys in Elephantland to reject Sessions if their party’s opposition strategy had succeeded in tarring Sessions as a latter-day Governor George Wallace (D., Ala.), a genuine southern racist. Alas for Democrats, their anti-Sessions race card turned into a joker as people learned the truth about his record:
“At a time when many U.S. attorneys in the South were not always welcoming to the Civil Rights Division, Jeff Sessions was,” said retired federal prosecutor Barry Kowalski, a self-described liberal Democrat who often disagreed with Sessions. As he told CNN: “Jeff had the vision and the courage and the desire to do right.”
“For her courage and for her role in changing Alabama, the South, the nation, and the world for the better, our nation owes thanks to Ms. Parks,” Sessions said on the Senate floor in April 1999. “I hope that this body will extend its thanks and recognition to her by awarding her the Congressional Gold Medal.” Parks was so honored that June. “This medal is encouragement for all of us to continue until all people have equal rights,” she said as she accepted it at the U.S. Capitol. The front of the medal declares Parks the “Mother of the Modern Day Civil Rights Movement.”
Sessions also recognized Parks on the Senate floor upon her death in 2005 and at the 2012 centennial of her birth.
During Senate debate on Holder’s nomination, Sessions said, “I have talked to him, and I believe he will be a responsible legal officer and not a politician as the Attorney General. I intend to support him.”
With the baseless case against Sessions in flames, endangered Trump-state Democrats face a choice: They can back Sessions and demonstrate that they have learned something since November 8, or they can oppose their well-liked colleague and signal that they remain hypnotized by the Democrats’ exhausted siren song about “eternal white racism.”
— Deroy Murdock is a Manhattan-based Fox News contributor and a contributing editor with National Review Online.