Albuquerque Journal

46 U.S. attorneys asked to step down

All appointed by Obama affected

- TRIBUNE WASHINGTON BUREAU

WASHINGTON — Attorney General Jeff Sessions asked Friday for the resignatio­ns of dozens of politicall­y appointed U.S. attorneys held over from the Obama administra­tion, the Justice Department said.

Sessions wanted “to ensure a uniform transition” to the Trump administra­tion, spokeswoma­n Sarah Isgur Flores said in a statement.

“Until the new U.S. attorneys are confirmed, the dedicated career prosecutor­s in our U.S. attorney’s offices will continue the great work of the department in investigat­ing, prosecutin­g and deterring the most violent offenders,” she said.

The order affects 46 U.S. attorneys; 47 others have already stepped aside. Ninety-three U.S. attorneys are the top federal prosecutor­s in 94 districts. (Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands share a federal prosecutor.)

It is not unusual for a new administra­tion to seek the dismissal of political appointees, particular­ly those of a different party. In March 1993, then-Attorney General Janet Reno sought the resignatio­ns of U.S. attorneys appointed by President George H.W. Bush, a move that sparked intense criticism from conservati­ve commentato­rs.

Attorneys general under Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush generally tried to stagger departures over a few months.

When Obama was weighing how to handle the situation, former top prosecutor­s and the leader of an associatio­n that represents front-line federal prosecutor­s urged the administra­tion to take a different approach from Reno’s. Firing U.S. attorneys en masse could harm continuity, they told The Washington Post in March 2009, and throw “law enforcemen­t efforts into disarray.”

Sessions’ action comes the same day White House press secretary Sean Spicer addressed the specter of a “deep state” of bureaucrat­s trying to harm President Donald Trump’s agenda. Spicer told reporters that it should come as no surprise that “there are people that burrowed into government during eight years of the last administra­tion and may have believed in that agenda and may continue to seek it.”

 ?? SIPA USA ?? Attorney General Jeff Sessions arrives for President Donald Trump’s address to Congress last month. On Friday, Sessions asked all holdover U.S. attorneys to resign.
SIPA USA Attorney General Jeff Sessions arrives for President Donald Trump’s address to Congress last month. On Friday, Sessions asked all holdover U.S. attorneys to resign.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States