A Sad Day for Voting Rights: Senate Rejects Nominee for Top Civil Rights Lawyer

By Project Vote March 5, 2014
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March 5, 2014

 
WASHINGTON, DC – This afternoon, the Senate voted to block the nomination of Debo P. Adegbile to be Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice. Project Vote Legislative Director Estelle Rogers issued the following statement in response.
 
“Rarely has the United States Senate considered a nominee so perfectly qualified for the position for which the President chose him. Mr. Adegbile is a lawyer of impeccable credentials with expertise in every facet of civil rights law.

Unfortunately for him, however, Mr. Adegbile participated in the post-conviction stage of a criminal case in which the defendant had killed a police officer, and in that role challenged the standards under which the death penalty was imposed. This is, of course, standard practice in criminal cases, but Adegbile’s involvement in the case was held up by demagogues as an automatic disqualifier, despite his extraordinary accomplishments as a lawyer.  
 
The demagogues carried the day, making this a very disappointing day for the United States of America.
 
Those of us who care about voting rights are especially disheartened. Adegbile would bring to the job of Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division a particularly stellar background in this area, including two Supreme Court arguments.
 
For now, the nation’s chief civil rights lawyer remains an open slot on the Justice Department’s roster, and the American people have been denied an exemplary attorney who would serve them well in this important post.”
 
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