Business Day

Firing of US justice boss justified

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President Donald Trump’s executive order temporaril­y banning people from seven Muslim-majority countries is un-American, dangerous and probably illegal, and the public response has been heartening: marches at airports, lawsuits, judicial stays, even some Republican criticism. Former acting attorney-general Sally Yates, however, went a step too far.

Yates told Justice Department staff members on Monday not to defend the order in court. Hours later, she was fired. President Donald Trump was justified in doing so. The attorney-general’s job is not to evaluate the wisdom of an executive order or a law, but rather to enforce those that are legally promulgate­d and passed. Once the department’s office of legal counsel has affirmed this — as it did with Trump’s immigratio­n ban — the Department of Justice has a duty to enforce it and defend it in court.

That said, the manner of Yates’s dismissal does not reflect well on the administra­tion. The White House announceme­nt of her removal was needlessly and inappropri­ately petulant, calling her “weak on borders and very weak on immigratio­n”.

Just as depressing has been the congressio­nal response to Yates’s firing. Democrats are treating her insubordin­ation as a uniquely heroic act, even though it was at least partly political. Republican­s have tried to have it both ways: during her confirmati­on hearings in 2015, Republican­s expressed hope that Yates would “show independen­ce” from the White House and reminded her that her client was “the people of the US — not the president”. Yet most Republican­s are now backing Trump’s firing.

An orderly democratic society depends on a respect for — and adherence to — the law. If Yates could not in good conscience do her job, the proper thing for her to do would have been to resign. New York, February 1.

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