Gulf Times

Senate Democrats mull lawsuit over Whitaker new job at Justice Dept

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US Senate Democrats are considerin­g legal action over President Donald Trump’s appointmen­t of a new acting attorney general, congressio­nal sources said on Friday, as some outside experts called the move unconstitu­tional.

Trump on Wednesday named Matthew Whitaker to replace former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who was forced out after months of attacks by Trump for recusing himself from an ongoing probe into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

The move made Whitaker supervisor of the investigat­ion, which has hung over Trump’s presidency.

Whitaker has criticised the probe in the past as too wide-ranging, which has raised concerns among Democrats that Sessions’ ouster and Whitaker’s appointmen­t might be precursors to Trump moving to end it.

Senate Democrats were considerin­g suing Trump, the sources said, on the grounds that, in naming Whitaker, the president ignored a statutory line of succession at the Justice Department and deprived senators of their constituti­onal “advice and consent” role on some presidenti­al appointmen­ts.

“The only two paths to that office are regular succession, and advice (and) consent,” said a source close to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal told Reuters late on Friday he was “considerin­g action that might be brought against an interim appointmen­t that violates the normal statutory line of succession and raises very serious constituti­onal questions.” He said he was speaking only for himself and he hoped Republican­s might join as plaintiffs if a lawsuit goes forward.

The Appointmen­ts Clause of the US Constituti­on states that some senior government officials, known as “principal officers,” must be confirmed by the Senate.

A spokesman for Senate Judiciary chairman Chuck Grassley said Trump had the authority to appoint Whitaker as acting attorney general temporaril­y, even though he had not been confirmed by the Senate.

Such appointmen­ts can be done for senior officials who have worked in the department for at least 90 days and can last for up to 210 days, spokesman George Hartmann said.

As the minority party in the Senate, Democrats might need some Republican support to have legal standing to sue Trump under the Appointmen­ts Clause, said Andrew Wright, who was a White House lawyer under former President Barack Obama.

The source close to the Senate Judiciary Committee said Democrats were unsure whether they would reach out to Republican­s to join the lawsuit, but added it was “not likely.”

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, who earlier this year introduced legislatio­n to protect Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who is conducting the probe, said Whitaker did not pose a threat to his work.

“Mueller will be allowed to do his job,” Graham said in a Friday interview on Fox News Radio.

John Yoo, a former Justice Department lawyer in the George W Bush administra­tion, said “the Supreme Court made clear that the Attorney General is a principal officer” in a 1998 case.

“Therefore, Whitaker cannot serve as acting Attorney General...Any other officer in the Justice Department who was appointed through advice and consent can serve, including the Deputy AG, the solicitor general, and the assistant AGs,” said Yoo, now a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

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