BlaKPAC pastors led by BlakPAc Mid Atlantic Director Corrogan Vaughn
and national leaders gathered Monday in the Cannon House Office Building
Room 441 on Capitol Hill to denounce the recent accusations of racism
against Republican Sen. Jeff Session of Alabama that Democrats leveled
since his nomination for U.S. Attorney General.
The men present urged people to ignore the allegations of racism and
to give Sessions a chance in an event hosted by the Family Research
Council (FRC) and the Frederick Douglas Foundation.
“Americans are living in a toxic climate where the serious charge of
racism is carelessly leveled against anyone with whom the left
disagrees. We are here today to make it perfectly clear that these
accusations against Senator Jeff Sessions is baseless,” began Rev. Dean
Nelson, the director of African-American Outreach at the FRC’s Watchmen
at the Wall.
People rushed out to accuse Sessions of discrimination and racism
after President-elect Donald Trump nominated him as U.S. Attorney
General. A New York Times piece alleged that Sessions referred to a
black prosecutor as “boy” and had quipped that the Klu Klux Klan was
“okay until I found out that they smoked pot.”
Bishop Harry Jackson urged the public to focus on Session’s track
record rather than the charges of racism. He pointed out Session’s
insistence that a KKK member receive the death penalty for allegedly
killing a black teenager.
“Sessions helped de-segregate schools in Alabama- a huge issue. Also
he got the death penalty for a KKK murderer. I think that would qualify
you as someone who is eliminating racism, not one who is perpetrating
racism,” Jackson declared.
Other leaders pointed out that Sessions is well-qualified and has a history of working with people across the aisle.
“In 2003, Jeff Sessions worked besides the late Ted Kennedy to lead
the efforts to pass the Prison Rape Elimination Act, signed into law by
President George W. Bush,” Rev. Troy Towns, a pastor at a Montgomery
church, said.
The Prison Rape Elimination Act was a criminal justice reform effort aimed at cutting down on prison rapes.
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