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365Gay.com
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Clinton
Pushes
Civil Rights Agenda Including
Gay Rights, In NAACP
Speech
By AP
from 365Gay.com on the Web, September 16, 2007
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North Charleston, South Carolina
-- Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, unveiling her
agenda to promote civil rights, told an NAACP banquet Saturday that the "scales
of justice are seriously out of balance" for black Americans.
"We have had an attorney general who doesn't respect the rule of law or enforce
the civil rights laws on the books," she told about 900 people at the annual
Freedom Fund Banquet of the Charleston National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People.
She applauded the Friday decision by an appeals court in Louisiana tossing out
the aggravated battery conviction that could have sent a black teenager to
prison for 15 years in last year's beating of a white classmate in the racially
tense town of Jena.
The teenager, 16 at the time of the December beating of a white youth, should
not have been tried as an adult, the appeals court ruled. He is one of six
black students charged in the attack and one of five originally charged as
adults with attempted second-degree murder.
The charges have brought criticism that blacks are treated more harshly than
whites after racial confrontations.
"There is no excuse for the way the legal system treated those young people,"
she said.
Earlier Saturday, the New York senator issued a release in which she said she
will focus on the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, including adding
to its budget, as part of an effort to "undo the damage done under President
Bush."
Clinton said during her speech that too many people are invisible to the
nation's leaders.
"You're invisible to the president even when you are on CNN," she said,
referring to the survivors of Hurricane Katrina two years ago.
Clinton, rival Barack Obama and other presidential candidates are heavily
courting the black vote as they trek through this early voting state.
Nearly half the voters in the 2004 Democratic presidential primary here were
black.
Clinton said her administration would seek to rebuild the Justice Department's
traditional role in defending civil rights and to review charges of improper,
politically motivated hiring to determine whether any laws were broken.
"We have to believe justice is blind in America," she told the audience.
The earlier campaign statement accused the Bush administration of driving the
Civil Rights Division "toward an agenda driven by partisanship, cronyism and
ideology" and cited media reports that state political appointees have dominated
the hiring process under Bush.
Last month, Assistant Attorney General Wan J. Kim, the Justice Department's top
civil rights enforcer, resigned after more than a year of criticism that his
office filled its ranks with conservative loyalists instead of experienced
attorneys. The Justice Department said his office had set record levels of
civil rights enforcement.
Clinton's other proposals include combatting voter ID laws, letting ex-felons
who have completed their sentences regain their right to vote and making
Election Day a federal holiday to make voting easier. She said she would
press for Washington, D.C., to get a seat in the House of Representatives.
Clinton also is proposing an expansion of federal hate crimes legislation to
include crimes committed against people based on their gender, sexual
orientation, gender identity or disability.
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