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‘We Both Are The Descendants Of Slave Owners’, Says McConnell

Photos: Michael Brochstein/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images; Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Tuesday responded to reports that his 19th-century ancestors owned slaves by pointing out that the same was true of former President Barack Obama — and that they were in agreement on the issue of slavery reparations.

McConnell told reporters on Capitol Hill when asked whether his ancestry influenced his opposition to reparations for African-Americans, “you know, I find myself in the same position as President Obama, we both oppose reparations, and we both are the descendants of slave owners.”

James McConnell and Richard Daley, are two of McConnell’s great-great-grandfathers and between them owned at least 14 slaves in Alabama before the Civil War, as reported. The records were traced using Limestone County “slave schedules” in the 1850 and 1860 censuses, according to reports.

Photo by: Andrew Harrer/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images

Just before the June hearing in the U.S. House of Representatives on whether the U.S. government should pay reparations to the descendants of slaves, McConnell threw cold water on the idea by stating that he doesn’t “think reparations for something that happened 150 years ago, for whom none of us currently living is responsible for, is a good idea.”

Obama has long maintained that reparations are the wrong approach for trying to level the economic playing field for African-Americans. Back in 2008, Obama said, “I have said in the past — and I’ll repeat again — that the best reparations we can provide are good schools in the inner city and jobs for people who are unemployed.” In his 1995 autobiography, “Dreams From My Father,” Obama, whose mother was white, wrote of family lore that said he was related to Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

The debate over whether former slaves or their descendants should receive compensatory payments from the U.S. government has been around since 1865, when Union Gen. William T. Sherman made his famous promise of “40 acres and a mule” to freed slaves.

Author Ta-Nehisi Coates, whose article in the Atlantic advocating for reparations reignited the issue, in responding to the McConnell’s assessment of reparations, testified before the House committee that the issue was still very much alive, stating “while emancipation dead-bolted the door against the bandits of America, Jim Crow wedged the windows wide open, that’s the thing about Sen. McConnell’s ‘something.’ It was 150 years ago, and it was right now.”