Sessions well-documented praise of Rosa Parks belies 'racist' claims
By Adam Shaw Published November 18, 2016
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2016...st-claims.html
When President-elect Donald Trump picked Jeff Sessions for attorney general Friday, critics zeroed in on racist remarks Sessions
allegedly made
decades ago – but the Alabama senator's
20-year history of honoring black civil rights icon Rosa Parks may not square with efforts to
paint him as a bigot....
..."If you have nostalgia for the days when blacks kept quiet, gays were in the closet, immigrants were invisible and women stayed in the kitchen, Senator Jefferson Beauregard Sessions is your man," said Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill. in a fiery statement Friday.
"Senator Sessions' record suggests that he will carry on an old, ugly legacy in this country's history when civil rights for African-Americans, women and minorities were not regarded as core American values," the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) President and CEO Cornell William Brooks said in a statement....
..."Thirty years ago, a different Republican Senate rejected Senator Sessions' nomination to a federal judgeship. In doing so, that Senate affirmed that there can be no compromise with racism; no negotiation with hate," added
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.
Yet, the
narrative of Sessions as an unapologetic racist is complicated somewhat by
his repeated advocacy for black civil rights hero Rosa Parks.
In 1999, Sessions called successfully for the Alabama native to be given the Congressional gold medal. In doing so, Sessions made a
passionate call for lawmakers to renew the principle of equality under the law.
"As legislators, we should work to strengthen the appreciation for this fundamental governing principle
by recognizing those who make extraordinary contributions towards ensuring that all American citizens have the opportunity, regardless of their race, sex, creed, or national origin, to enjoy in the freedoms that this country has to offer," Sessions said, before calling Parks a
"living embodiment of this principle."
A year later, Sessions attached an amendment to an appropriations bill that gave $1 million to Alabama for the Rosa Parks Library, Museum and Learning Center at Troy State University Montgomery Campus as a way of
memorializing the Montgomery Bus Boycott, for which Parks' protest was the impetus.
In 2005, after Parks' death,
Sessions gave a passionate tribute to her on the floor of the Senate, saying "history will remember Rosa Parks for
shaking America's conscience and changing the course of our Nation for the better."
In 2012, Sessions introduced a resolution to the Senate floor, along with Michigan Democratic senators Carl Levin and Debbie Stabenow, to observe the 100th anniversary of Parks' birth.
"Her courage ignited major changes in our nation and lead a revolution in race relations. Mrs. Parks will always be remembered as a courageous individual, who confronted injustice head-on and, in so doing, changed our nation. Her legacy continues to endure," Sessions said....