Racism controversies or not, Trump names loyalists to key cabinet posts
WASHINGTON — His new attorney general once lost a job over alleged racism against blacks. His new national-security adviser not only blasts Muslims, but has also reportedly been paid recently by the governments of Russia and Turkey.
Donald Trump made one thing clear Friday: He will appoint loyalists to top positions — controversy be damned.
Trump has named as his attorney general Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III, the first senator to support his presidential bid. Sessions would become the top law-enforcement official in the country. An immigration hawk today, Sessions first made national news when allegations of racism cost him a judgeship.
“I am not a racist. I am not insensitive to blacks. I have supported civil rights activity in my state,” he testified before the Senate in 1986, as it rejected his judicial nomination.


