McClatchy: Black caucus women back Elizabeth Warren, read letter that earned her Senate rebuke

Black caucus women back Elizabeth Warren, read letter that earned her Senate rebuke
 
By William Douglas
 
 
The women of the Congressional Black Caucus had Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s back Wednesday night.
 
Before the Senate confirmed Sen. Jeff Sessions as President Donald Trump’s attorney general on a 52-47 vote, 13 black caucus Democrats took to video and read a letter by the late Martin Luther King’s widow critical of the Alabama Republican - the same letter that got Warren, D-Mass., barred from speaking on the Senate floor after she read from it Tuesday night.
 
The 1986 letter, written by, the late Coretta Scott King, opposed Session’s nomination for a federal judgeship back then.
 
"Mr. Sessions has used the awesome power of his office to chill the free exercise of the vote by black citizens in the district he now seeks to serve as a federal judge," Warren said, quoting the letter.
 
Sen. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky. issued a rare rebuke to Warren Tuesday night for violating the chamber’s rules against impugning another senator’s motives and barred her from speaking during the rest of debate on Sessions’ nomination. The Republican-controlled Senate backed up McConnell’s action in a party-line vote.
 
Wednesday night’s final vote on Sessions’ confirmation lacked drama. Most House Democrats, including Black Caucus members, were in Baltimore for a retreat.
 
The 13 women who read the letter in the video were Reps. Barbara Lee and Karen Bass of California; Sheila Jackson Lee and Eddie Bernice Johnson of Texas; Joyce Beatty and Marcia Fudge of Ohio; Brenda Lawrence of Michigan; Lisa Blunt Rochester of Delaware; Yvette Clarke of New York; Gwen Moore of Wisconsin; Alma Adams of North Carolina; Robin Kelly of Illinois; and Bonnie Watson Coleman of New Jersey.
 
McClatchy’s Curtis Tate contributed to the story.
 

Stay Connected

Use the form below to sign up for my newsletter and get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.