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Will Sessions make it to be AG ? - 11/21/2016 12:50:16 AM   
MrRodgers


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Reagan in 1986 nominated the 39 year old US Attorney and future Alabama AG for a lower fed. judge seat. Highlights...or lowlights

A REPUB senate...voted him down based on devastating testimony by former colleagues, that he was a racist. Ironically, the committee that Sessions now sits on, judiciary...voted at the time 10-8 against sending his nomination to the floor.

It would be nice to report that Mr. Sessions, who is now 69, has conscientiously worked to dispel the shadows that cost him the judgeship. Instead, the years since his last confirmation hearing reveal a pattern of dogged animus to civil rights and the progress of black Americans and immigrants.

Under him, the department would most likely focus less on prosecutions of minority voter suppression and more on rooting out voter fraud, that hallowed conservative myth. As a federal prosecutor, Mr. Sessions brought voter-fraud charges against three civil rights workers trying to register black voters in rural Alabama. The prosecution turned up 14 allegedly doctored ballots out of 1.7 million cast, and the jury voted to acquit.

Maybe too, we can...forget, also, any federal criminal-justice reform, which was on the cusp of passage in Congress before Mr. Trump’s “law and order” campaign. Mr. Sessions strongly opposed bipartisan legislation to scale back the outrageously harsh sentences that filled federal prisons with low-level drug offenders. Instead, he called for more mandatory-minimum sentences and harsher punishments for drug crimes. The one bright spot was his working with Democrats to reduce the 100-to-1 disparity between punishments for crack and powder cocaine offenses.

HERE

In my mind, there is a better than 50/50 probability that Sessions will again be voted down. The only reason he may succeed, is that AG is not a lifetime job.

< Message edited by MrRodgers -- 11/21/2016 12:56:31 AM >


_____________________________

You can be a murderous tyrant and the world will remember you fondly but fuck one horse and you will be a horse fucker for all eternity. Catherine the Great

Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it's just the opposite.
J K Galbraith
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RE: Will Sessions make it to be AG ? - 11/21/2016 7:03:10 AM   
hot4bondage


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Sessions is a regressive authoritarian turd, but Trump will reward his loyalty in one way or another. Judge Nap is about the only potential pick that doesn't scare the living hell out of me.

(in reply to MrRodgers)
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RE: Will Sessions make it to be AG ? - 11/21/2016 11:10:29 AM   
Nnanji


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Apparently, Sessions was the trial run warmup by Teddy and Biden for Bork. Which the left still has to believe in order to keep the story correct.

http://www.weeklystandard.com/in-alabama-jeff-sessions-desegregated-schools-and-got-the-death-penalty-for-kkk-head/article/2005461

(in reply to hot4bondage)
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RE: Will Sessions make it to be AG ? - 11/21/2016 3:41:12 PM   
bounty44


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"Byron York: Attorney General Jeff Sessions is Democrats' nightmare"

quote:


President-elect Trump's transition team knew that nominating Jeff Sessions for Attorney General would set off controversy. Democrats and their allies in the press have at key times in the past called Sessions a racist — they're now using the Alabama senator's full name, Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III, to heighten the Old South effect — and now, as they oppose Trump at nearly every turn, they've turned to race again.

Here's why the effort to stop Sessions is likely to intensify as his confirmation hearings near. Sessions is the Senate's highest-profile, most determined, and most knowledgeable opponent of comprehensive immigration reform. Democrats are particularly anxious about immigration because of the unusually tenuous nature of President Obama's policies on the issue. Those policies can be undone unilaterally, by the new president in some cases, and by the attorney general and head of homeland security in other cases. There's no need for congressional action — and no way for House or Senate Democrats to slow or stop it.

There are extensive, and in some cases, strict immigration laws on the books, passed by bipartisan majorities of Congress. Obama wanted Congress to change those laws. Congress declined. So Obama stopped enforcing provisions of the law that he did not like. A new administration could simply resume enforcement of the law — a move that by itself would bring a huge change to immigration practices in the United States. No congressional approval needed.

There are laws providing for the deportation of people who entered the U.S. illegally. Laws providing for the deportation of people who entered the U.S. illegally and later committed crimes. Laws for enforcing immigration compliance at the worksite. Laws for immigrants who have illegally overstayed their visas for coming to the United States. Laws requiring local governments to comply with federal immigration law. And more.

Many of those laws have been loosened or, in some cases, completely ignored by the Obama administration. A Trump administration would not need to ask Congress to pass any new laws to deal with illegal immigration. If there was a presidential order involved in Obama's non-enforcement, Trump could undo it, and if there were Justice Department directives involved, Sessions could undo them, and if there are Department of Homeland Security directives involved, the still-to-be-nominated secretary could undo them.

"It will be possible for the Trump administration to dramatically increase enforcement of immigration laws by using what is now on the books," notes Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies at the Center for Immigration Studies, which advocates reducing immigration into the U.S.

One of the immediate changes would be to get rid of Obama's Priority Enforcement Program, instituted in 2014. Known as PEP, the program made it almost impossible for Immigration and Customs Enforcement to even begin deportation proceedings until an illegal immigrant has been convicted of an aggravated felony or multiple misdemeanors. Obama's policy "forced local ICE offices to release of thousands of deportable criminals," Vaughan has noted, "including Eswin Mejia, an illegal alien with prior arrests who killed 21-year old Sarah Root in Omaha, Neb., while drag-racing drunk in January of this year. Like many of the 86,000 convicted criminals released by ICE since 2013, Mejia is now a fugitive but considered a 'non-criminal,' because he has yet to be tried and convicted for Root's death."

President Trump could throw PEP out the window. And that would be just a start. The Center for Immigration Studies has published a list of 79 Obama policies the new administration could change without any action by Congress. (The list was compiled in April 2016, before anyone could know who the next president would be.) Among them:

1) End the embargo on worksite enforcement. "Experience has shown that employers respond very quickly and voluntarily implement compliance measures when there is an uptick in enforcement," Vaughan notes, "because they see the potential damage to their operations and public image for being caught and prosecuted."

2) Restore ICE's authority to make expedited removals of illegal immigrants who are felons or who have recently crossed into the United States.

3) Tighten requirements for H-1B visas, including banning such visas for low-salary, low-skill jobs, revoking visas that are followed by layoffs of American workers, and other measures.

4) Stop suing states that take action to support immigration enforcement, and instead support such enforcement. After Arizona's famous SB 1070 law, Obama cracked down, arguing that the federal government has the sole authority to enforce immigration law, and also to not enforce immigration law. President Trump could choose to enforce the law.

5) Force sanctuary cities to observe the law. Trump campaigned extensively on the subject of sanctuary cities, mentioning San Francisco murder victim Kate Steinle in many speeches. Attorney General Sessions could enforce an existing law, 8 USC 1373, which prohibits local communities from banning their officials from cooperating with federal immigration authorities.

The Justice Department, among other federal agencies, hands out billions of dollars in federal grants. In instructing grant recipients to comply with federal law, the Obama administration ignored 8 USC 1373; in September, the Justice Department inspector general told a House committee that, "we found that the Department had not provided grant recipients with clear guidance as to whether Section 1373 was an applicable federal law with which recipients were expected to comply."

Attorney General Jeff Sessions could change that, and, as a result, many cities would find it harder to defy federal law. "For the diehards who do not respond to incentives or changed policies (like Chicago, San Francisco, Philadelphia, etc.)," writes Vaughan, "he could look at prosecution under 8 USC 1324, which prohibits shielding illegal aliens from detection."

Those are just a few of the things a Trump administration, and an Attorney General Sessions, could do using executive authority. It's not hard to see why Democrats want to stop them.

Of course, Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee, which will handle the Sessions nomination, cannot very well say to the nominee: "I will not support you because you might actually enforce the law." So they need another basis on which to oppose Sessions. That's where 30-plus year-old allegations come in.

Republicans, with a narrow majority in the Senate, should be able confirm their colleague, especially since soon-to-be-former Sen. Harry Reid nuked the minority's ability to filibuster executive branch nominations. But before that happens, look for the noise and the anger over the Sessions nomination to increase. There's too much at stake for Democrats to go along.


http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/article/2607849

(in reply to Nnanji)
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RE: Will Sessions make it to be AG ? - 11/21/2016 3:47:45 PM   
servantforuse


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Yes, he will...

(in reply to MrRodgers)
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RE: Will Sessions make it to be AG ? - 11/21/2016 4:23:05 PM   
bounty44


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"Senate Democrats Won't Be Able To Stop Sessions' Attorney General Nomination...And It's All Their Fault"

quote:

Well, as the Left goes ballistic over the prospect of Sen. Jeff Sessions becoming our next attorney general and Rep. Mike Pompeo (R-KS) as our new CIA director, they should know that Democrats have very little ground to oppose them. Thanks to outgoing Sen. Harry Reid’s (R-NV) nuking of the filibuster rules in 2013 for presidential appointments, with the exception of Supreme Court nominations, only a simple majority is needed to confirm Pompeo and Sessions (via Washington Post):

quote:

Senate Democrats are not going to be able to block Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions bid to become attorney general. And they can’t do much to stop Kansas Rep. Mike Pompeo from assuming the helm of the CIA.

And they have only themselves to thank for it.

That’s because exactly three years ago, the Democratic Senate majority — led by Harry Reid (Nev.) — rammed through controversial rules fundamentally changing the way the Senate does business. They unleashed in November 2013 what’s called the “nuclear option” allowing senators to approve by a simple majority all presidential appointments to the executive branch and the judiciary, with a big exception for Supreme Court justices.

Democrats took the controversial step because they were so frustrated by what they saw as Republican foot-dragging on President Obama’s choices for his administration and federal judgeships. Under the new rules, it takes only a simple majority of senators to confirm such appointments instead of the 60 typically needed to force Senate action...

In 2013, then-Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) warned the GOP could easily seize power back in the 2014 elections – which they did, securing the majority in the Senate.

And that’s now what’s happened.


The publication added that Senate Democrats hope the nuclear option isn’t expanded to include Supreme Court nominations, and that Pompeo is making some people uneasy, namely Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), due to him being one of the firebrand members of the House Committee on Benghazi. Well, too bad—Reid screwed you over. Incoming Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said he was against the 2013 nuking of the filibuster rules. This was inevitable. There is no such thing as permanent political majorities. Both parties have learned this brutally, Republicans post-2004 and Democrats post-2010. The GOP was eventually going to retake the Senate and it would be Democrats possibly facing off against a majority that seems bound to confirm presidential nominees that are simply driving the Left nuts. Reid may have thought about this, but so what; he’s leaving. It’s someone else’s mess to clean up. That person would be Schumer. It’s quite possible that Reid knew the dangers, but did it anyway for the few minutes of satisfaction he would receive in sticking it to the GOP. Now, Donald J. Trump, who is anathema to progressives, has picked someone who is truly the anti-Holder, despite the fact that Sessions, who is being smeared as a horrible racist, supported Holder’s initial nomination as attorney general.

Reid is a man who totally screwed his party and left them defenseless to stop Trump nominees Democrats truly feel are unacceptable. At the same time, it’s precedent, so maybe the Trump White House and Sessions should publicly thank Harry Reid for making these cabinet appointments super easy to confirm. Trump can nominate anyone.


http://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattvespa/2016/11/21/senate-democrats-wont-be-able-to-stop-sessions-attorney-general-nominationand-its-all-their-fault-n2248434

(in reply to servantforuse)
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RE: Will Sessions make it to be AG ? - 11/21/2016 4:56:59 PM   
MrRodgers


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Hardly the case at all.

Deported
Bush in 8 years....2.1 million
Obama in 8 years.....2.5 million

The federal government has, for nearly two decades, been pursuing an enforcement-first approach to immigration control that favors mandatory detention and deportation over the traditional discretion of a judge to consider the unique circumstances of every case. The end result has been a relentless campaign of imprisonment and expulsion aimed at noncitizens, a campaign authorized by Congress and implemented by the executive branch. While this campaign precedes the Obama administration by many years, it has grown immensely during his tenure in the White House.

One distinct feature of the record number of deportations is the increasing share of deportations by U.S. Customs and Border Protection after border apprehension. In 2013, 25% of all deportations were carried out by the agency, up from 17% in 2012. Meanwhile, the number of deportations carried out by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which deports people caught both at the border and the interior of the country, fell in 2013 compared with 2012.

This rise in the number of deportations also coincides with stalled growth of the U.S. unauthorized immigrant population since 2009, and a more recent rise in the number of apprehensions at the U.S.-Mexico border. In 2013, there were 414,000 apprehensions at the southwest border, a rise of 27% over 2011 (the most recent low in apprehensions).

The bed quota requires U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to hold an average of 34,000 individuals in detention on a daily basis. This quota has steadily increased since its establishment in 2009. No other law enforcement agency is subject to a statutory quota on the number of individuals to hold in detention.

The bed quota prevents ICE from exercising discretion and expanding more efficient alternatives to detention (ATD) that would allow individuals who pose no risk to public safety to be released back to their families while awaiting immigration court hearings.

The policy requires U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to keep an average of 34,000 detainees per day in its custody, a quota that has steadily risen since it was established in 2006 by conservative lawmakers who insisted that the agency wasn’t doing enough to deport unlawful immigrants.

But as illegal crossings from Mexico have fallen to near their lowest levels since the early 1970s, ICE has been meeting Congress’s immigration detention goals by reaching deeper into the criminal justice system to vacuum up foreign-born, legal U.S. residents convicted of any crimes that could render them eligible for deportation. The agency also has greatly expanded the number of undocumented immigrants it takes into custody after traffic stops by local police.


Secure Communities, which was created in 2008, is an information-sharing program between DHS and the Department of Justice. The program uses biometric data to screen for deportable immigrants as people are being booked into jails. Under Secure Communities, an arrestee’s fingerprints are run not only against criminal databases, but immigration databases as well. If there is an immigration “hit,” ICE can issue a “detainer” requesting that the jail hold the person in question until ICE can pick him up.

Under Section 287(g) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, DHS may deputize selected state and local law-enforcement officers to perform the functions of federal immigration agents. Like employees of ICE, these “287(g) officers” have access to federal immigration databases, may interrogate and arrest noncitizens believed to have violated federal immigration laws, and may lodge “detainers” against alleged noncitizens held in state or local custody.

Secure Communities was replaced by the Priority Enforcement Program, which prioritizes "threats to national security, public safety, and border security."

In the 105 years between 1892 and 1997, the U.S. deported 2.1 million people, meaning that under presidents Bush and Obama, the number of people deported by the U.S. in the course of a century was more than doubled in just 16 years of consecutive presidencies.

HERE

Partisan spin has always been one the great skills of the right.

< Message edited by MrRodgers -- 11/21/2016 4:57:43 PM >


_____________________________

You can be a murderous tyrant and the world will remember you fondly but fuck one horse and you will be a horse fucker for all eternity. Catherine the Great

Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it's just the opposite.
J K Galbraith

(in reply to bounty44)
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