Exclusive–The ‘Test’: Senator Seeks Answers from All Presidential Candidates on Trade, Immigration, Crime

immigration
AP/J. Scott Applewhite

Ahead of the New Hampshire primary, Senator Jeff Sessions exclusively lays out to Breitbart News the five questions that all candidates seeking the Republican Party’s nomination must answer.

In recent weeks, multiple establishment media reports have documented the defining role Sessions has played in the 2016 election.

Talking Points Memo recently declared: “This is the Jeff Sessions election and the GOP is just along for the ride.”

Vanity Fair similarly observed that the “intellectual groundwork for Trump’s campaign and the Republican civil war that he has unleashed was laid without much notice in an unlikely place. In the summer of 2013, Alabama senator Jeff Sessions noted that passing immigration reform, at last as Washington understood the term, would be an unmitigated disaster.”

Roll Call notes that the memo “Sessions sent to other GOP senators in 2013… foreshadowed the genesis of Trump’s candidacy by urging the party to embrace an ‘honest populism’ designed ‘to speak directly to the real and legitimate concerns of millions of hurting Americans whose wages have declined and whose job prospects have grown only bleaker.'”

The Hudson Institute’s John Fonte remarked upon the “conservative populist breakout” early last year writing, “the political leader of the conservative populist coalition is the indefatigable Senator Sessions. Day in and day out, for the past two years, Sessions has been issuing memos and talking points, giving speeches, and making media appearances explicating a coherent populist message. The Alabamian is a conviction politician.”

Sessions recently explained that “this election will be the last chance for Americans to get control of their government.”

In an interview with Howie Carr, Sessions explained that “this may be the last opportunity the American people have to have their will imposed and create a lawful immigration system that serves the national interest.” Sessions noted how it is critical for the preservation of American sovereignty and the interests of American workers that President Obama’s Trans-Pacific Partnership “must not pass.”

Sessions explained that on “these two issues [i.e. immigration and TPP]… the voters should say, ‘If you’re not going to be right on those, I’m not voting for you in this primary and I’m not going to vote for you as president.’ I really think it’s that important.”

Conservative legend and grassroots heroine Phyllis Schlafly expounded upon the assertions of Sen. Sessions stating, “Our immigration policy has been anti-American, decade after decade, and the voters need to know that 2016 might be our last chance to elect a president who can reduce this tide of illegals crossing our borders.”

“Our nation’s sovereignty depends on control of both immigration and trade, and that’s why Senator Sessions urges voters to choose a candidate who promises to kill the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal with nearly a dozen Asian nations,” Schlafly proclaimed.

Schlafly, who like Sessions represents the gold standard for grassroots conservatives, has similarly become a leading voice in the 2016 election. Schlafly has thrown much of her political weight behind the candidacy of Donald Trump, who shares her desire for curbing immigration and promoting America-first trade policies. Schlafly has explained that Trump is “the only hope to defeat the kingmakers”– i.e. the Republican Party’s donor class.

The Sessions Test consists of five questions:

Question 1: How would you vote (or how did you vote) on fast-track, and would you support or oppose advancing a final trade agreement which enters the United States into a new international commission with binding authority on future United States trade policy?

Question 2: If the vote on the Trans-Pacific Partnership were held today, and you had a vote to cast in Congress, would you vote for it or against it?

Question 3: Upon entering office, will you promptly and unconditionally terminate and rescind all of President Obama’s illegal executive amnesties – which provide work permits and entitlements to illegal aliens – including President Obama’s first executive amnesty in 2012, which remains in effect?

Question 4: A supermajority of GOP voters say immigration is too high. Every year, on autopilot, we let in another 1 million immigrants on green cards, 700,000 foreign guest workers, half a million foreign students, and 100,000 refugees and asylees. Historical precedent would be to reduce record-breaking immigration, rather than continuing to surge it beyond all historical precedent. Will you support legislation to reduce immigration numbers, and will you oppose legislation that would add to the number?

Question 5: Today, law enforcement are under increasing scrutiny and face excessive criticism from the political elites and the media, and are being targeted by criminals and terrorists. Meanwhile, since 2011, the federal prison population has declined by over 20,000, and is on track to be at its lowest level since 2005. Since 2009, the total state prison population has dropped every year, and is over 56,000 lower than it was then. These circumstances may have contributed to a nationwide spike in crime. The FBI recently reported an overall increase in violent crime and a 17 percent increase in homicides in the nation’s 50 largest cities. At the same time, the CDC reports that heroin and opioid drug overdoses have reached an all-time record high. Do you support efforts by President Obama and some Republicans in Congress to reduce penalties for drug-trafficking and further reduce the federal prison population, or do you think government should do more to keep drug traffickers off the streets?

COMMENTS

Please let us know if you're having issues with commenting.