Donald Trump once followed Jeff Sessions’ lead, promising as a candidate the crack­downs on crime, immigration and trade for which Sessions crusaded in the Senate. The first Senator to endorse @realDonaldTrump, Sessions gave him credibility with the far right and provided the intellectual framework for his law-and-order sloganeering. And as Attorney General Sessions has turned Trump’s rhetoric into reality, emerging as the most effective enforcer of the President’s agenda. But if the fixation on law and order brought Sessions and Trump together, it is also what has rent them asunder. The broken relationship has turned the job of a lifetime into an exercise in humiliation. Rumors that Sessions’ neck is on the chopping block are constant, and Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt has been angling to replace him. As Sessions spoke with TIME's national political correspondent Molly Ball on March 15, he was headed to Nashville to give a speech to a police chiefs’ convention, followed by a stop in Lexington, Ky., to meet with prosecutors, police and families affected by the #opioid crisis. All the while, Fox News played on mute above his head, its chyrons questioning whether Sessions was about to be fired. Even if his tenure ends tomorrow, writes Ball, Sessions would leave a legacy that will affect millions of Americans. He has dramatically shifted the orientation of the Justice Department, pulling back from police oversight and civil rights enforcement and pushing a hard-line approach to #drugs, #gangs and #immigration violations. "I am thrilled to be able to advance an agenda that I believe in," he told a group of federal prosecutors in Lexington later that day. "I believed in it before I came here, and I’ll believe in it when I’m gone." Read the full cover story on TIME.com. Photograph by @philipmontgomery for TIME

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 3月30日 00時22分


Donald Trump once followed Jeff Sessions’ lead, promising as a candidate the crack­downs on crime, immigration and trade for which Sessions crusaded in the Senate. The first Senator to endorse @ドナルド・トランプ, Sessions gave him credibility with the far right and provided the intellectual framework for his law-and-order sloganeering. And as Attorney General Sessions has turned Trump’s rhetoric into reality, emerging as the most effective enforcer of the President’s agenda. But if the fixation on law and order brought Sessions and Trump together, it is also what has rent them asunder. The broken relationship has turned the job of a lifetime into an exercise in humiliation. Rumors that Sessions’ neck is on the chopping block are constant, and Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt has been angling to replace him. As Sessions spoke with TIME's national political correspondent Molly Ball on March 15, he was headed to Nashville to give a speech to a police chiefs’ convention, followed by a stop in Lexington, Ky., to meet with prosecutors, police and families affected by the #opioid crisis. All the while, Fox News played on mute above his head, its chyrons questioning whether Sessions was about to be fired. Even if his tenure ends tomorrow, writes Ball, Sessions would leave a legacy that will affect millions of Americans. He has dramatically shifted the orientation of the Justice Department, pulling back from police oversight and civil rights enforcement and pushing a hard-line approach to #drugs, #gangs and #immigration violations. "I am thrilled to be able to advance an agenda that I believe in," he told a group of federal prosecutors in Lexington later that day. "I believed in it before I came here, and I’ll believe in it when I’m gone." Read the full cover story on TIME.com. Photograph by @philipmontgomery for TIME


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