As confirmation hearings got underway Tuesday for Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.), President-elect Donald Trump’s pick for attorney general, widespread protests continued throughout the country, on social media, and within the chambers of Capitol Hill.
CODEPINK protesters and other activists were escorted from the proceedings after disrupting the hearings, chanting, “No Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA,” and hoisting signs that read, “End Racism, Stop Sessions” and “Support LGBTQ, Stop Sessions,” among other slogans.
On social media, opponents tracked actions and posted their own messages of protest under the hashtag #StopSessions.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) read off a list of the Alabama lawmaker’s anti-civil rights, anti-immigrant, and anti-LGBTQ record, stating, “Ultimately, we must ask: Can Senator Sessions be attorney general for all people?”
For many, the answer is unequivocally no.
On Monday, a coalition of interfaith clergy and moral leaders published a letter in The Nation urging U.S. Congress to reject Sessions’s nomination, also highlighting his historic attacks on voting rights, his promotion of xenophobia and bigotry, and his record of voting against equal rights for women. “Not only in the distant past but also in the present day, Senator Sessions’s record reveals his consistent support for ideological extremism, racist and classist policies, and the writing of discrimination into law,” the letter states.
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