Letter: Support the Confirmation Of Vanita Gupta To Be Associate Attorney General Of the United States

[vc_row][vc_column width="2/3"][vc_column_text] Dear Senator: 

On behalf of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights – a coalition of more than 220 national organizations committed to promoting and protecting the civil and human rights of all persons in the United States – and the 108 undersigned organizations, we write to express our strong support for the confirmation of The Leadership Conference’s former president and CEO Vanita Gupta to serve as Associate Attorney General of the United States. We could not be more pleased that President Biden has tapped Ms. Gupta for this critical leadership position at the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). 

Ms. Gupta is a fierce champion of civil rights and has devoted her career to advancing racial and social justice and equality for all. Ms. Gupta was a beloved leader of our organization who day in and day out placed the dignity and humanity of people and communities at the center of our work. She is an inspired choice to serve as the Associate Attorney General in the Biden-Harris Justice Department, and we urge her rapid confirmation by the U.S. Senate. 

The position of Associate Attorney General is the third highest ranking position at the Justice Department and is a principal partner of the Attorney General and Deputy Attorney General in operating the 100,000-plus person federal agency. The Associate Attorney General supervises the Civil Rights Division, Civil Division, Office on Violence Against Women, Community Relations Service, Environment & Natural Resources Division, Office of Justice Programs, and several other critical offices. 

The daughter of Indian immigrants, Ms. Gupta would be the first woman of color in U.S. history to serve as Associate Attorney General, and she would be the first civil rights lawyer to serve in one of the top three positions at DOJ. President Biden called Ms. Gupta “one of the most respected civil rights lawyers in America.”1 Sherrilyn Ifill, the president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF), said “Ms. Gupta is among the most highly-respected, visionary civil rights lawyers in the country, and her skill in consensus-building is exceptional.”2 The executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Anthony Romero, called Ms. Gupta “a once-in-a-generation leader.”3 

Ms. Gupta’s appointment comes at a pivotal moment in our history when it comes to the national reckoning with racial justice. From the tragic killing of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police officers last year, to the recent Capitol coup attempt by white supremacists intent on overturning the results of the free and fair 2020 presidential election, this nation is in desperate need of a federal government that will work aggressively to enforce our civil rights laws and ensure racial justice in America. President Biden’s Justice Department will lead that effort. As President Biden explained on January 7 when he announced his intent to nominate Ms. Gupta and his Justice Department leadership team: “[The Justice Department] was formed in 1870 to enforce the civil rights amendments that grew out of the Civil War. The 13th, 14th, and 15th amendments. To stand up to the Klan, to stand up to racism, to take on domestic terrorism. This original spirit must again guide and animate its work.”4 

The fight for racial justice has guided and animated Ms. Gupta’s entire career, and she is very well suited to serve in DOJ leadership at this moment. After graduating from Yale University and New York University Law School, Ms. Gupta went to work at LDF, a civil rights organization that has helped lead the fight for racial justice in our courts for the past 80 years. While working at LDF, Ms. Gupta successfully led the effort to overturn the wrongful drug convictions of 38 individuals in Tulia, Texas, who were later pardoned by then-Governor Rick Perry. 

After her tenure at LDF, Ms. Gupta continued her fight for racial justice at the ACLU, where she served as the deputy legal director and oversaw all of the ACLU’s criminal justice reform work. She also served as director of the ACLU’s Center for Justice and led their Smart Justice Campaign aimed at ending mass incarceration. Among other cases, Ms. Gupta filed a lawsuit that was subsequently settled with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency to improve detention conditions for asylum seekers. 

In 2014, at age 39, Ms. Gupta was chosen to lead the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, and she served in that position until the end of the Obama administration. In that role, she led critical efforts to reform our criminal justice system and investigate unconstitutional policing practices in Ferguson, Baltimore, Chicago, and other police departments around the country. She aggressively enforced our federal voting rights laws even though DOJ enforcement efforts were significantly hampered by the Supreme Court’s devastating 2013 Shelby County v. Holder decision. And she worked tirelessly to protect LGBTQ and disability rights, prosecute hate crimes, and fight discrimination in education, housing, lending, and employment. One key to Ms. Gupta’s effectiveness has been her ability to work with individuals and organizations from various parts of the ideological spectrum to find common ground. Forging purposeful paths forward with all stakeholders, and her intimate knowledge of DOJ and the Civil Rights Division, will serve her in good stead as the Associate Attorney General. 

We, of course, are most familiar with Ms. Gupta’s stellar work at the helm of The Leadership Conference for the past three and a half years. The Leadership Conference is the nation’s oldest, largest, and most diverse civil and human rights coalition, and Ms. Gupta was the perfect person to lead our coalition during an incredibly difficult time for civil and human rights in America – when these rights were under assault on a near daily basis.5 The Leadership Conference board chairs made the following statement about Ms. Gupta’s legacy: “She has taken the helm of the nation’s largest civil and human rights coalition and its public education arm and made them a strategic nerve center for addressing real-time threats while building an affirmative vision for an America as good as its ideals. Vanita significantly expanded the organizations’ capacity to lead major national campaigns around voting rights, the 2020 Census, federal courts, justice reform and police accountability, among other priorities. While we are deeply saddened to see her go, we are thrilled that she has been asked by President-elect Biden to serve as the Associate Attorney General at the U.S. Department of Justice.”

Ms. Gupta will bring a vital civil rights and racial justice focus to the work of the Biden-Harris Justice Department at a critical moment for our country. As President Biden said in his inaugural address: “A cry for racial justice some 400 years in the making moves us. The dream of justice for all will be deferred no longer.” Ms. Gupta will heed this call, and we urge the Senate to confirm her as soon as possible to be Associate Attorney General. 

 

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National Hispanic Media Coalition (NHMC) is a woman-led 501(c)(3) non-profit civil and human rights organization that was founded to eliminate hate, discrimination, and racism toward the Latino communities.
© 2024 National Hispanic Media Coalition // communications@nhmc.org // o. (626) 792-6462
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