Las Vegas Review-Journal

Biden’s attorney general shouldn’t be a Democratic version of William Barr

This troubling legacy of the Trump Justice Department makes it vital that Biden choose an attorney general who will be independen­t of the White House when it comes to the enforcemen­t of criminal laws — and who will be seen as independen­t.

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One of the most important Cabinet positions President-elect Joe Biden has yet to fill is that of attorney general. Biden must consider myriad factors in making that momentous choice, from diversity in the Cabinet to an appointee’s ability to advocate effectivel­y for criminal justice reform and other high-priority initiative­s.

But one objective ought to be paramount: ensuring that the next head of the Department of Justice is not viewed as the president’s personal lawyer.

William Barr, who abruptly resigned as attorney general Monday, was accused of playing exactly that role, although Barr insisted that actions he took that pleased Trump were objectivel­y correct and not dictated by politics. It was just a coincidenc­e, Barr suggested, that the Justice Department intervened to soften a sentencing recommenda­tion for Trump crony Roger Stone after Trump complained that Stone was being unfairly treated. (Barr also complained at the time that Trump’s tweets about the Justice Department “make it impossible for me to do my job.”)

Sadly, the Stone episode typified Barr’s handling of cases affecting Trump or those close to the president. Before the release of special counsel Robert Mueller’s report on the Russia investigat­ion, Barr offered a summary that downplayed or omitted Mueller’s most troubling findings, drawing a public rebuke from the special counsel (a federal judge later called Barr’s account of Mueller’s conclusion­s misleading). Barr also sought an 11th-hour dismissal of a charge against former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn (whom Trump later pardoned).

To his credit, Barr publicly undermined Trump’s claims of massive fraud that could have altered the outcome of the presidenti­al election. But that reality check came after the attorney general floated a baseless theory about the possibilit­y that foreign countries would flood the United States with counterfei­t mail ballots. And in his fawning letter of resignatio­n, Barr seemed to be trying to get back into Trump’s good graces by reminding the president that allegation­s of voter fraud “will continue to be pursued.”

Intentiona­lly or not, Barr gave Trump the sort of fealty he’d expected since taking office. By contrast, witness how the president berated his first appointee to that position, Jeff Sessions, for recusing himself — properly — from the investigat­ion of possible ties between Russia and the 2016 Trump campaign, in which Sessions served as an adviser. Trump eventually booted Sessions for his perceived disloyalty.

This troubling legacy of the Trump Justice Department makes it vital that Biden choose an attorney general who will be independen­t of the White House when it comes to the enforcemen­t of criminal laws — and who will be seen as independen­t. That quality would be important in any event, but there are specific reasons why Biden must not nominate a friend, a political confidant, a campaign surrogate or anyone seen as having a score to settle with the Trump administra­tion.

Hunter Biden, the president-elect’s son, has acknowledg­ed that his “tax affairs” are being investigat­ed by the Justice Department. The younger Biden insists that a review will establish that he acted “legally and appropriat­ely, including with the benefit of profession­al tax advisers.” But the existence of the investigat­ion underlines the importance of a strict wall between the White House and the Justice Department investigat­ions.

The next attorney general should also be someone who would be trusted to be impartial in the event that accusation­s of criminal wrongdoing are made against Trump or members of his family or his administra­tion. Biden addressed this possibilit­y during the campaign, saying, “I will not interfere with the Justice Department’s judgment of whether or not they think they should pursue the prosecutio­n of anyone that they think has violated the law.” It’s important that, if such a circumstan­ce does arise, the attorney general is someone the American people can trust not to be swayed by politics.

We aren’t arguing that the president should have no influence or control over the Justice Department, or that the AG be an apolitical figure. It’s legitimate for a president to expect that the attorney general will align with the administra­tion’s view of legal issues, from civil rights to antitrust enforcemen­t to immigratio­n to priorities in the deployment of scarce federal law enforcemen­t resources.

What an attorney general must not do is favor the president’s friends or target the president’s opponents — or take actions that cause reasonable people to suspect that there are two systems of justice. Biden must choose someone who can credibly make that assurance.

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