Chicago Sun-Times

BOTH ILLINOIS SENATORS WANT BIDEN TO RETAIN LAUSCH AS U. S. ATTORNEY

- BY LYNN SWEET AND JON SEIDEL

WASHINGTON — If it’s up to Illinois’ Democratic senators, U. S. Attorney John Lausch — nominated by President Donald Trump — will remain Chicago’s top federal prosecutor after Joe Biden becomes president.

Presidents can fire U. S. attorneys and Democratic Illinois Senators Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth want Lausch retained, the Chicago Sun- Times has learned.

President- elect Biden, kicking off his transition on Monday, has not signaled his plans for the 93 U. S. attorneys who serve at the discretion of the president.

Durbin spokesman Emily Hampsten said both Durbin and Duckworth “supported John Lausch during his confirmati­on. And they continue to have confidence in him.”

Multiple public- corruption investigat­ions have gone public during Lausch’s three- year tenure, leading to criminal charges against several Democratic politician­s.

Even Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan, the chair of the Democratic Party of Illinois, has been implicated, though not criminally charged, in a bribery case involving ComEd. Madigan has denied wrongdoing.

Court records show key groundwork for those corruption cases was also laid during the tenure of Lausch’s predecesso­r, Zachary Fardon.

Meanwhile, Lausch shares a common background with Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot. Both once served as assistant U. S. attorneys in the city.

That might explain how Lightfoot and Lausch have managed to maintain a working relationsh­ip despite a toxic national divide that led Lightfoot to publicly spar with Trump over his constant Chicago bashing and his attorney general, William Barr.

Lausch has been able to maintain Lightfoot’s trust even as he appeared at the White House with Trump to announce Operation Legend, a federal crime crackdown program, and when he shared the stage with Barr in Chicago last September.

Now, by offering a show of support to Lausch, Durbin and Duckworth are signaling they do not want any roadblocks thrown up that could be perceived as interferin­g with Lausch’s public- corruption investigat­ions.

Durbin and Duckworth went so far last week as to call for Madigan to step down as state party chair after he proved a drag on House and down- ballot Democratic contenders.

A Lausch spokesman did not immediatel­y return a call seeking comment Wednesday.

The background

In March 2017, then U. S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions asked 46 U. S. attorneys appointed during former President Barack Obama’s administra­tion to resign. Fardon was among them.

While U. S. attorneys are nominated by presidents, they must be confirmed by the Senate, now under GOP control. Whether the Senate flips to Democrats won’t be known until the January run- off for two Georgia Senate seats up for grabs.

Controvers­y is avoided when the home state senators and the White House agree on a nominee. A nominee must clear the Senate Judiciary Committee, of which Durbin is a member, in order to get a Senate vote.

In 2017, the Trump White House sent Lausch, its pick to fill the newly vacant U. S. attorney seat in Chicago, to a screening panel created by Durbin and Duckworth to help fill the Northern District of Illinois top prosecutor’s vacancy.

Lausch flew through the Senate. Lausch was confirmed on a voice vote by the Senate for a four- year term on Nov. 9, 2017. If Lausch decides to depart when his term ends, Biden will still have a chance to tap his replacemen­t.

 ?? KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? U. S. Attorney General William Barr ( left) listens as U. S. Attorney John R. Lausch of the Northern District of Illinois speaks during a press conference in Chicago on Sept. 9.
KAMIL KRZACZYNSK­I/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES U. S. Attorney General William Barr ( left) listens as U. S. Attorney John R. Lausch of the Northern District of Illinois speaks during a press conference in Chicago on Sept. 9.

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