Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump sued over Whitaker appointmen­t

- By Todd Ruger

WASHINGTON — Three Democratic members of the Senate Judiciary Committee filed a lawsuit Monday challengin­g the appointmen­t of Matthew Whitaker as acting attorney general, asking a federal court to stop him from leading the Justice Department.

Sens. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticu­t, Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island and Mazie K. Hirono of Hawaii argue in the case that President Donald Trump’s move to name Whitaker temporaril­y as the nation’s top law enforcemen­t official violates the Appointmen­ts Clause of the Constituti­on.

If allowed to stand, “Mr. Whitaker’s appointmen­t would create a road map for the evasion of the constituti­onally prescribed Senate advice-and-consent role,” the senators argue in the lawsuit.

Trump has said there is “no rush” to name a new attorney general, and the Justice Department has concluded the move is legal and constituti­onal. Whitaker is the first acting attorney general who has not received Senate confirmati­on since 1866.

“The U.S. Senate has not consented to Mr. Whitaker serving in any office within the federal government, let alone the highest office of the DOJ,” the Democratic senators state in the lawsuit.

Whitaker will be able to exercise all the powers of the attorney general for as many as 210 days and potentiall­y many more, the senators wrote, and that unlawfully denies legislator­s their right to cast an effective vote and robs them of their core powers and responsibi­lities. The Senate in the confirmati­on process would have the opportunit­y “to consider his espoused legal views, his affiliatio­n with a company that is under criminal investigat­ion for defrauding consumers, and his public comments criticizin­g and proposing to curtail ongoing DOJ investigat­ions that implicate the President,” the lawsuit states.

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