Remember nine years ago, when the auto industry was teetering on the brink of disaster? The housing bubble had burst, credit evaporated, and nobody was buying cars. Years of poor decision-making made the American automakers particularly vulnerable, so their execs headed to Washington to seek a bailout.
Part of that process was to appear before congressional panels so representatives and senators could ask appropriate questions like: "Why should we trust you?"
Our current attorney general, Jeff Sessions, was a senator from Alabama at that time, and he was among those who grilled the execs. I remember Sessions being particularly aggressive. I didn't feel bad for the execs (after all, they were responsible).
But Sessions was so ... vengeful — as if he had bought a Cadillac Cimarron back in the day and was still bitter about it. He seemed not to care that without a bailout the entire American auto industry would very likely collapse (and a good chunk of our manufacturing capabilities with it).
Cut to this week: Sessions appeared again before a congressional panel as attorney general and was exactly the sort of hostile testifier he would have eviscerated when he was the senator asking the questions. Not remembering, mis-remembering, truthful remembering but not actually how it happened. Which is it, Jeff?
At best, it's just hypocritical behavior on Sessions' part. At worst, he's being a bully — abusing power when he has the opportunity and hiding behind it when he feels threatened.
No, wait, I can think of one thing worse: He's the dang attorney general of the United States! If there is one position that Americans need as an honest advocate, it's attorney general. And Sessions is acting with all the integrity of a 1978 Dodge Aspen.