Jeff Sessions goes through 10-hour grilling on first day of highly anticipated confirmation hearing

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Jeff Sessions

Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Jeff Sessions.

Sen. Jeff Sessions spent more than 10 hours Tuesday in the first day of his Senate confirmation hearing defending his record from accusations of racism, explaining his position on implementation of the law, and answering how he would stand up to President-elect Donald Trump in various scenarios as attorney general.

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Nominated by Trump to be the nation's top law-enforcement official, Sessions' hearing was viewed as one of the most anticipated for all of Trump's nominees. The Alabama senator was questioned from seemingly everything from his position on whether grabbing women by their genitals is considered sexual assault to his thoughts on the Freedom of Information Act.

Sessions surprised early on in his hearing by saying he would recuse himself from any potential investigation involving Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton because of statements he made as a surrogate along the campaign trail in support of Trump.

"Some of the comments I made I do believe could place my objectivity into question," he said, adding, "We could never have a political dispute turn into a criminal dispute."

The Alabama Republican also said that, although he disagreed with Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court decision that legalized a woman's right to have an abortion, he would "respect" the law as attorney general, a strong contrast with his voting record in the Senate. He similarly said he would protect the rights of LGBTQ Americans, indicating similar respect for the Supreme Court decision that legalized same-sex marriage.

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Many of Trump's campaign positions came up throughout the hearing, as Sessions said he did not agree with a proposed indefinite ban on Muslim immigrants entering the country. He said that Trump had since clarified his position to mean individuals from countries with a high-risk of terrorist activity.

Sessions also said waterboarding is "absolutely" illegal, making sure to insist he would not be "a mere rubber stamp" for the president-elect. Sessions reaffirmed his position on immigration amid repeated questions, saying the priority of a Trump administration would be targeting immigrants in the country illegally who have committed serious crimes for deportation.

An expected focal point of the hearing - questions regarding past statements Sessions made on race - were not pressed against him. However, a series of liberal activists erupted periodically with chants of, "No Trump, no KKK, no fascist USA," before being removed from the hearing by Capitol police. Sessions did address concerns over allegations of racism, which derailed his 1986 appointed to a federal judge post.

"I never declared that the NAACP was 'un-American' or that a civil rights attorney was a 'disgrace to his race,'" he said in his opening statement. In his 1986 hearing, he did not contest the allegations.

Jeff Sessions

Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

Jeff Sessions.

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Democrats pressed him on issues regarding race, particularly involving his record of pursuing civil-rights cases, as well as his voting record on voting rights.

In one of the most contentious exchanges, Sessions went back-and-forth with Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota, who suggested the senator had exaggerated his involvement in some civil-rights cases.

"Our country needs an attorney general who doesn't misrepresent or inflate," Franken said.

On voter ID laws, Sessions said that, if written properly, they are legitimate. Opponents of the laws say they are intended to curb minority communities from voting.

In another exchange with Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, Sessions was pressed about his connections with individuals such as activist John Tanton, whom critics have called a white nationalist, and Center for Security Policy founder Frank Gaffney, who has prominently espoused anti-Muslim views. Sessions received awards from both men.

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"How can Americans have confidence that you're going to enforce anti-discrimination laws if you've accepted awards from these kinds of groups and associated with these kinds of individuals and won't return the awards?" Blumenthal asked.

Sessions insisted that it would not interfere with his enforcement of anti-discrimination laws. Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, the Senate Judiciary Committee chair, interjected to assert that senators receive a ton of awards and should not be accountable for every award they receive.

In an interview with MSNBC following the hearing, Franken said he was "very troubled" by Sessions' answers.

"Well, we still have got another day of hearings and I'm just going to reserve until I'm able to absorb everything," he said. "I was very troubled by the answers to my line of questioning, particularly on his very much exaggerating, misrepresenting his history in terms of civil rights cases."

"I'm going to digest all of this," he added. "But the attorney general is the person who is - his job is to make sure that there's not fraud in elections, but also there's not voter suppression…we can't have the chief law enforcement official of our nation who doesn't recognize that there is such a thing as voter suppression."

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William Smith, the former chief counsel for Sessions on the Senate Judiciary Committee, told MSNBC that his old boss was "crushing it."

"I think it's going fabulously for Sen. Sessions," he said. "Only one way to describe it. He is crushing it."

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