[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 169 (Monday, November 28, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6510-S6511]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ATTORNEY GENERAL NOMINATION
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, the reason I came to the floor is to make
note of the fact, as I alluded to a moment ago, that President-Elect
Donald Trump announced his intention to nominate one of our own, a
Member of the Senate, to be the Nation's top law enforcement officer.
Our friend, the junior Senator from Alabama, Mr. Sessions, is
undoubtedly qualified and prepared for this role as Attorney General
because of the long career he spent protecting and defending our
Constitution and the rule of law.
If there is one thing we can do in the U.S. Government to help
restore the public's confidence, it will be to reembrace the concept of
equal justice under the law and ensure there is not a double standard
by which people are judged--the powerful, the well-connected, and then
the rules that apply to everybody else--but, rather, that the same
rules apply to all of us. The same laws apply to all of us.
In fact, that is the bulwark of our constitutional democracy.
Frankly, I think the American people have seen, in the last two
Attorneys General--the current one and her predecessor, Mr. Holder--is
essentially an office of the Department of Justice that was not worthy
of the name ``Justice.'' It should have been called an extension of the
White House political operation because so much of the way they
conducted themselves was governed not by the rule of law but by
political considerations.
Our friend, the Senator from Alabama, understands firsthand the
importance of hard work as well. He is the son of a country store owner
from Hybart, AL. He received his law degree from the University of
Alabama. He served in the U.S. Army Reserves.
As we know, his service didn't stop there. Guided by a sense of duty
for the last five decades, Jeff Sessions has dedicated his life to the
State of Alabama and to the United States itself, first as a Federal
prosecutor--including 12 years as U.S. attorney for the Southern
District of Alabama, then as the State's attorney general, and now in
the Senate where he has served with distinction for the last decade-
plus.
Above all, Jeff Sessions has worked for the people of his State and
this country with one purpose in mind; that is, to uphold the rule of
law.
His career in the Senate reflects this earnest commitment to do what
is right, not what is popular, not what is politically convenient but
to do what is right, guided by the Constitution, the laws, and inspired
by the people he was elected to serve. He has been a defender of our
military families and played a leading role in ensuring that rural
communities have the health care they need.
I understand the long knives are already starting to come out against
President-Elect Trump's nominees and that Senator Sessions--our
colleague from Alabama--is not going to be spared some of those
attacks, but I would ask some of these critics who don't know his
entire record to consider the fact that a few years ago he teamed up
with the senior Senator from Illinois to reform sentencing charges on
crack cocaine, sentencing charges that disproportionately discriminate
against African-American communities.
It was a bipartisan solution that in Jeff's words, ``achieve fairness
without impeding our ability to combat drug violence.''
I would also ask these critics to consider the bill he introduced
with Senator Ted Kennedy, the now-departed ``liberal lion of the
Senate,'' to use grant funding to reduce sexual assaults in prison. The
legislation requires the Department of Justice to keep track of these
assaults, and it was signed into law by President George W. Bush.
Taken legislatively, these are not the sorts of actions that fit this
distorted picture that some of the critics are already starting to draw
about Senator Sessions and his record in the Senate or his character as
a man.
[[Page S6511]]
I have had the honor of working closely with Jeff on the Senate
Judiciary Committee since I came to the Senate, and I am proud to call
him a friend. Those who have watched him day-in and day-out understand
his stalwart commitment to the rule of law and his deep and abiding
concern for our country.
Of course, we wouldn't be Senators if we didn't sometimes disagree
with each other. It is just normal, but Senator Sessions has always
engaged with seriousness and cordiality and the kind of civility this
Chamber and this country could use more of. By the strength of his
arguments, he has helped us all to see the weaknesses in our own
arguments as he has worked together with his colleagues to try to help
us build consensus, which is the only way we get anything done and the
way our constitutional system was designed. Only by building consensus
can we move our country forward.
We are going to miss Senator Sessions in the Senate when he moves on
to the executive branch as Attorney General, but it is even more
important, at this point in this country's history, to have a champion
of the Constitution and the rule of law at the Department of Justice
and to help restore the reputation of that Department.
As I said earlier, for years now--during the course of Attorney
General Holder's tenure and unfortunately succeeded by Attorney General
Lynch--the Department of Justice has twisted the Constitution to
further the President's political agenda.
I give just one example. When Congress was performing its legitimate
oversight responsibilities into a gun-running operation gone wrong
called Fast and Furious, Attorney General Holder was called before the
Senate Judiciary Committee, called before our corresponding House
committee, and simply defied those committees' lawful and appropriate
oversight responsibilities over what the Department of Justice was
doing.
To my knowledge, this resulted in his having been the first Attorney
General to be held in contempt of Congress--a sitting Attorney General
of the United States held in contempt of Congress.
Unfortunately, the Obama administration put politics ahead of our
national commitment to the rule of law and too often demonized those
who worked to protect us. I have every confidence that Senator
Sessions, as the Attorney General of the United States, the head of the
Department of Justice, and the Trump administration will defend the
rule of law and will use his expertise in the Constitution to play an
essential role in our President-elect's Cabinet. As a 15-year veteran
of the Department, Senator Sessions understands better than most what
needs to be done to help the Department of Justice refocus its
responsibilities and its priorities.
Here is the bottom line. We need people in the highest rungs of our
government who will ensure our Constitution is preserved, protected,
and defended. Senator Sessions, as the next Attorney General of the
United States, will do just that.
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