There is perhaps no one who knows the cost of "selective empathy" better than Senator Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III. It's the reason his own nomination to the federal court died in the Senate 23 years ago.
Long before the Belizean Grove found its groove, Sessions was on the stand himself, defending his nomination against claims that he practiced a form of "selective empathy" as old as the United States itself: the kind where white men can only find compassion for other white men. Accusations of racial insensitivity and prejudice dominated the 1986 hearings.
At the hearing, witnesses testified that Sessions had referred to the
NAACP and the ACLU as "un-American," called a black assistant U.S.
attorney "boy," and made flattering remarks about the Ku Klux Klan
during an investigation about a lynching. Sessions denied the charges
that he was racist, said that he was "one of the good guys," and argued
that his comments were made in jest.
This week, Sessions was responsible for cross-examining the first
Latina nominated to the Supreme Court. Talk about an elephant in a hearing room.
There is nothing secret about the senator's background. In 1986, The
New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and scores of other
publications covered the Sessions hearings.
On May 7, 1986, The New York Times reported that some senators were
concerned about Sessions's objectivity. "A number of senators
said today that they felt Mr. Sessions was qualified to be a judge but
questioned whether he would be impartial," the story read.
One of those senators would later become the vice president of the
United States. Joe Biden was the senior Democrat on the committee, and
one of Sessions's most vocal critics. "I consider his statements to be
inappropriate for someone holding public office and seeking a lifetime
appointment to the bench," Biden told The New York Times.
The committee killed his nomination. But it didn't end there. Sessions
went on to become an attorney general in Alabama, where his agenda
continued to attract controversy for its racial preoccupations.
In 2002, The New Republic profiled Sessions in a story entitled, "The
Senator Who's Worse Than Trent Lott." The piece was damning, especially
in its telling of Sessions's failed prosecution of three civil rights
workers for voter fraud in Alabama.
"The year before his nomination to federal court, he had unsuccessfully
prosecuted three civil rights workers--including Albert Turner, a
former aide to Martin Luther King Jr.--on a tenuous case of voter
fraud. The three had been working in the 'Black Belt' counties of
Alabama, which, after years of voting white, had begun to swing toward
black candidates as voter registration drives brought in more black
voters. Sessions' focus on these counties to the exclusion of others
caused an uproar among civil rights leaders, especially after hours of
interrogating black absentee voters produced only 14 allegedly tampered
ballots out of more than 1.7 million cast in the state in the 1984
election."
This story has disappeared. The Republican Party's central opposition
to the nomination was rooted in the concern that Sotomayor is unable to
be fair or impartial, values that, in the words of Sessions himself,
"are at the core of the American experience." If the GOP was concerned
that its efforts would be undermined by pesky questions about how the senator's own biases might influence his questioning of Sotomayor, they
didn't have to be. This week, nearly every major news organization
failed to recall the senator's long, inconvenient relationship with bias.
Given his history, it's bizarre to watch Jeff Sessions grill Sonia Sotomayor on the finer points of judicial impartiality.
"Aren't you saying there that you expect your background and--and
heritage to influence your decision-making?" Sessions asked the judge
earlier this week, as concerns over bias and "empathy" framed Republicans' questioning.
With a solid Democratic majority, no one expected the hearings to be
groundbreaking. On Sunday, Sessions said he wouldn't try to
derail Sotomayor's nomination, but that the hearing would be an
"educational moment." He was right. Sotomayor is sure to be confirmed
as the next Supreme Court justice of the United States. And we have
learned that, like "empathy," amnesia too can be selective.







Thank you for writing this and providing links - I've heard many references to Session's racism (although not from the main news outlets) but few details. What a horrible man.
It's amazing that a person like that can be elected, but what can you expect from Alabama?
Katherine,
I am from Alabama so perhaps can recognize prejudice and stereotyping better than some others. Can you recognize the irony of your generalization about people "from Alabama"? Would you recognize it better if we substituted another minority in place of "Alabama"?
It is usually the bigot's excuse that he/she is simply generalizing from their own personal experience. If you have experience with a few ignorant Alabamians, I apologize for the rest of us. If you are generalizing from our politician(s), lets look at Alaska, South Carolina, or even the entire US general election in 2004 for perspective.
I wish you would the movie Gettysburg and note the sergeant-major's exposition on judging people one at a time.
It's based on the history of the American South and of the Deep South in particular, and of the behaviour they accept from their politicians. It was one of the only places in the US where Obama got a lower percentage of the vote than Kerry. I'll believe the region has stopped being racist when I see things that indicate it has.
Maybe not every white person in Alabama is racist, but the fact that Sessions is in the Senate suggests that most are. A Senator who is blatantly racist is on a whole different level from a Governor who's controversial or who had an affair.
I'm torn between thinking I should visit the American south and judge for myself, and feeling that based on everything I've seen and heard from it it's one of the last places I'd ever want to be.
Hey Katherine — so you've never been to the Deep South yet are perfectly content to condemn almost 30% of the entire U.S. population to blatant racism? In what enlightened bastion of blind egalitarianism do you live? Boston? New York? Or, for an even greater dose of hypocrisy, maybe Western Europe?
And I'm sure everyone will be relieved to hear that the new and final metric on racism is whether an electoral unit voted more heavily for John Kerry than it did for Barack Obama. By that measure, Senator Sessions' home state of Alabama would be proclaimed a nirvana of equality: Obama received over 17% more votes in Alabama than Kerry did in 2004. And Obama's share of the vote in Alabama was over 5% higher than Kerry's.
Obama also received more votes than Kerry in Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia.
So I guess you're just another petty bigot who can't even be bothered with checking her irrelevant facts. The America that I live in has no place for your hateful, insular, and fear-mongering small mind.
Selective blogging
A failed prosecution of voter fraud does not necessarily racist make.
Sessions talks about his record here:
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=MjdhY2JhNGQyNDQwNmQyZTRlNTgzODliYmJjZWU3ZjA
Instead of reading the previous reader's suggestion of what Sessions has to say about his record, read one that's not so self-laudatory:
http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/view/110278
During Sessions' failed nomination it was brought to light that Mr. Sessions had previously said that he thought that the Ku Klux Klan was "not so bad of a group until I found out that some of them had smoked marijuana".
Senator Sessions also had referred to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) as "un-American" and "Communist-inspired" because they "forced civil rights down the throats of people". He also said that these groups were un-American when "they involve themselves in un-American positions in foreign policy". (i.e: You´re un-American if you disagree with the government positions.)
Senator Sessions was also one of only nine opponents of Senator John McCain´s anti-torture amendment. Sessions still supports former Vice President Dick Cheney's proposal to exempt the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) from any ban on the use of torture.
Sessions has been opposed to parts of the Voting Rights Act, which he described as a "piece of intrusive legislation." In 2006, he was in favor of letting it expire, and he also said that Congress should consider if it was even needed in some Northern cities and states. He later voted in favor of extending it.
This guy sounds like a real winner.
To that"every major news organization failed to recall" Sessions' 1986 hearing is wrong. The New York Times did a story on this after Sotomayor's nomination:
www.nytimes.com/2009/05/10/us/politics/09web-hulse.html
The Post has mentioned it various times, including in this story from last week: voices.washingtonpost.com/capitol-briefing/2009/07/todays_questioning_marks_a_pas.html
You can argue they should have written more on it. You can't say they didn't cover it, as this post does.