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Sessions Calls Hawaii 'an Island in the Pacific', Sparks Social Media Outrage

Using the hashtag #IslandinthePacific, many on Twitter reminded Sessions that Hawaii is, in fact, part of the country.
Using the hashtag #IslandinthePacific, many on Twitter reminded Sessions that Hawaii is, in fact, part of the country.
sessions calls hawaii  an island in the pacific   sparks social media outrage
Attorney General Jeff Sessions arrives for a meeting with the Organized Crime Council and Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force Executive Committee in Washington, D.C., U.S. April 18, 2017. REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein
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Attorney General Jeff Sessions arrives for a meeting with the Organized Crime Council and Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force Executive Committee in Washington, D.C., U.S. April 18, 2017. REUTERS/Aaron P. Bernstein

Attorney General Jeff Sessions arrives for a meeting with the Organised Crime Council and Organised Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force Executive Committee in Washington, DC, US April 18, 2017. Credit: Reuters/Aaron P. Bernstein

New York: Social media did not take kindly to US Attorney General Jeff Sessions referring to the country's 50th state of Hawaii as just "an island in the Pacific."

Using the hashtag #IslandinthePacific, many on Twitter reminded Sessions that Hawaii is, in fact, part of the country, the birthplace of former President Barack Obama and home to Pearl Harbor.

Sessions told The Mark Levin Show earlier this week that he was "amazed that a judge sitting on an island in the Pacific can issue an order that stops the president of the United States from what appears to be clearly his statutory and constitutional power."

Sessions was referring to judge Derrick Watson, a federal district court judge in Honolulu, who struck down the second version of Trump's immigration order banning immigrants from six majority-Muslim countries temporarily. He ruled the order discriminated against Muslims.

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The now infamous phrase from Sessions has been mentioned more than 27,000 times online, according to Brandwatch, a social media monitoring company.

The attorney general of Hawaii's office (@Atghlgov) tweeted an image of the act admitting Hawaii into the Union in 1959. The post was one of the office’s most viral yet with more 3,000 likes and nearly 2,000 thousand retweets.

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Senator Mazie Hirono (@maziehirono) tweeted: "Hey Jeff Sessions, this #IslandinthePacific has been the 50th state for going on 58 years. And we won’t succumb to your dog whistle politics."

Senator Brian Schatz (@brianschatz) wrote: "Mr attorney general: You voted for that judge. And that island is called Oahu. It's my home. Have some respect."

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Twitter user Jared M. Gordon (@JaredMGordon) tweeted: "Really amazed that an attorney general with ancestors from Britain [itself an island!] can be such an ignorant bigot. #IslandInThePacific"

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Hawaii was the first state to sue over Trump's revised ban.

(Reuters)

This article went live on April twenty-second, two thousand seventeen, at twenty minutes past three in the afternoon.

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