Barber, Butterfield Blast Trump Nomination Of NCGOP Attorney

Barber, Butterfield Blast Trump Nomination Of NCGOP Attorney

by 07/25/2017

Rev. Dr. William Barber, president of the NCNAACP, is alarmed that Pres. Trump is nominating a prominent Republican attorney to the federal bench for the Eastern District who fought to uphold North Carolina’s racial gerrymandered redistricting maps and 2013 voter suppression laws.

According to a federal appellate court last year, those laws targeted African-American voters with almost “…surgical precision,” while the US Supreme Court recently ruled the maps to be “unconstitutional.”

Attorney Thomas Farr, best known for representing Republican legislative leaders in court is up for the lifetime seat, and Rev. Barber called that “dangerous.”

“Farr has been the lead attorney on racist voter suppression,” Rev. Barber said in an interview Tuesday.  “He’s wasted millions of North Carolinian’s dollars (defending against NCNAACP lawsuits).

The civil rights leader vowed to go before the Senate Judiciary Committee to testify against Farr’s confirmation.

Farr is a labor and constitutional law litigator with Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak and Stewart law firm in Raleigh.

Congressman G. K. Butterfield (D-12-NC) also made it clear in a statement last week that he opposes the Farr nomination.

“I’m disappointed that President Trump nominated a lawyer who has been at the forefront of defending the North Carolina Republican legislature as it has repeatedly engaged in political gerrymandering of state legislative and congressional district boundaries, and has passed regressive voting laws that had the intended effect of diluting the voting rights of minority groups,” Rep. Butterfield said in a statement.

“The counties in the Eastern District have a substantial African American population (27%) , but the Court does not reflect that diversity.  The Court should include African American judges and this appointment simply maintains the status quo in a district with a large population of African American citizens.

“President Obama attempted to integrate this Court by nominating two African American females for this position (federal prosecutor Jennifer May-Parker and former NC Supreme Court Justice Patricia Timmons-Goodson), but their nominations were blocked by a Republican Senator (Richard Burr).

Butterfield concluded, “I urge the United States Senate to carefully scrutinize the record of Thomas Farr and determine if he can impartially serve as a judge in cases involving voting and civil rights.”

The judicial seat in question has been open for the past eleven years. The Eastern District covers 44 counties in North Carolina, from Raleigh in Wake County, to the coast. The seat has been vacant since 2005 – the longest federal judicial vacancy in the nation.

“There has never been an African-American to sit on that court,” Rev. Barber says.” It looks like the civil rights movement never happened.”

Farr has the backing of both Republican US senators Richard Burr and Thom Tillis. Both, who say that Farr is “well qualified,” are expected to push hard for Farr’s confirmation in the US Senate.

Farr has been down this road before, having been nominated by Pres. George W. Bush in 2006 and 2007, but the Senate Judiciary Committee never took up his nomination.

Farr has defended both the Republican-led NC legislature’s 2011 redistricting maps, and voter ID restrictions, both later thrown out by the federal courts.

Rev. John Mendez and Emmanuel Baptist Church in Winston-Salem were plaintiffs in the NCNAACP lawsuit against the 2013 voter ID laws. He did not return two calls for comment to his church Tuesday prior to press time.

Attorney Irving Joyner, chair of the NC NAACP Legal Redress Committee, said of Trump’s nomination of atty. Farr, “A pure simple case of stacking the judicial deck against voting rights and political participation by African Americans and other racial minorities.”

“Stacking” the federal judiciary with Republican judges is just one way critics like Joyner say Pres. Trump is attempting to prepare to win re-election in 2020.  Others also see the president’s controversial “Election Integrity Commission” as another attempt to control the voting in 2020 in a many states as possible to his liking.

However, at press time, at least 45 states have balked at the commission’s request for personal information about voters registered to vote, fearing that information will be misused by the Trump Administration. A series of complaints and lawsuits have forced the commission to stop its data collection.

Farr is expected to be heading up the legal team representing Republican legislative leaders on Thursday, July 27th when a federal three-judge panel for the US Middle District reconvenes to hear arguments about when legislative voting districts will be redrawn, and when (if possible) special elections could be held this year before November, based on those maps.

A spokesperson for Congressman Butterfield’s office said Friday afternoon that so far, no date has been announced for attorney Farr’s confirmation hearing to begin.

A person answering the phone for the NC Republican Party in Raleigh said he did not know who the press relations person for the state party was. An email was sent, but there was no response from the NCGOP by press time Friday.

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