Los Angeles Times

Amid tension, Barr is stepping down

With his departure, Trump loses an ardent and powerful ally.

- By Del Quentin Wilber and Eli Stokols

WASHINGTON — U. S. Atty. Gen. William Barr, one of President Trump’s staunchest allies, is resigning amid lingering tension with the president over baseless claims of election fraud and the investigat­ion into President- elect Joe Biden’s son.

Barr went to the White House on Monday, where Trump announced on Twitter that the attorney general had submitted his letter of resignatio­n. “As per letter, Bill will be leaving just before Christmas to spend the holidays with his family,” Trump tweeted — just minutes after the electoral college certif ied Biden as the winner of the November election.

Trump has publicly expressed anger about Barr’s assertion this month that the Justice Department had found no widespread fraud that would have changed the outcome of the election.

The president has also been upset that the Justice Department did not publicly announce it was investigat­ing Hunter Biden ahead of

the election, despite department policy against such a pronouncem­ent.

Apparently placated by Barr’s effusive resignatio­n letter, which glossed over his recent frustratio­ns, Trump declared that their “relationsh­ip has been a very good one, he has done an outstandin­g job!” Trump said in the tweet that Deputy Atty. Gen. Jeff Rosen, whom he labeled “an outstandin­g person,” will become acting attorney general.

Barr told Trump that he was “proud to have played a role in the many successes and unpreceden­ted achievemen­ts you have delivered for the American people. Your record is all the more historic because you accomplish­ed it in the face of relentless, implacable resistance.”

The rift between the pair was long in coming and highlighte­d how even the most loyal officials often f ind themselves on the outs with the president.

Within weeks of taking over as attorney general early last year, Barr went out of his way to defend Trump from allegation­s he obstructed the investigat­ion of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III. The attorney general later backed his department’s attempt to prevent a government watchdog from forwarding to Congress a whistleblo­wer’s complaint that would lead to the president’s impeachmen­t. And his department aggressive­ly fought efforts by Congress to obtain Trump’s tax returns.

Despite such steadfast service, tension between the pair steadily grew. Barr told colleagues he was frustrated by Trump’s bluster, baseless accusation­s about voter fraud and desire to criminaliz­e political conduct. More than once, Barr warned Trump that his tweets urging investigat­ions of political rivals would doom any such inquiries, according to Justice Department officials.

The issue of Trump blundering into Justice Department business came to a head in February when the president complained that prosecutor­s were seeking too stiff a prison term for his longtime friend Roger Stone, a Republican operative convicted of lying to House investigat­ors, obstructin­g Congress and witness tampering.

Barr felt Trump’s tweets criticizin­g prosecutor­s, the jury forewoman and the judge were making it “impossible for me to do my job.”

“I think it’s time to stop the tweeting about Department of Justice criminal cases,” Barr said. Trump ignored him. Barr widened the breach irreparabl­y Dec. 1 when he told the Associated Press in an interview that the Justice Department and FBI had not uncovered evidence of widespread voter fraud despite looking into the allegation­s.

“To date, we have not seen fraud on a scale that could have effected a different outcome in the election,” Barr told the wire service.

“Most claims of fraud are very particular­ized to a particular set of circumstan­ces or actors or conduct. And those have been run down; they are being run down,” Barr said. “Some have been broad and potentiall­y cover a few thousand votes. They have been followed up on.”

Democrat Biden beat Trump in the electoral college 306 to 232, the exact margin that led Trump to claim the White House in 2016 and that the president has called a “landslide.” Biden won the national popular vote by more than 7 million.

Even so, Trump has refused to concede and made repeated baseless claims that Biden stole the election through fraud in at least five swing states.

Barr’s comments were among the strongest yet by a Republican refuting Trump’s claims and carried added heft because he has been such a staunch defender of the president. The attorney general is respected by Republican­s in Congress, and few criticized his statements upholding the integrity of the election even as they have joined Trump in underminin­g it.

Congressio­nal reaction to Barr’s resignatio­n was mixed. Sen. Lindsey Graham ( R- S. C.), the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, hailed the attorney general in a statement, saying he was “the right man at the right time in overseeing highly political investigat­ions and stood in the breach at times against both the left and the right. America has greatly benefited from the service of William Barr as attorney general, and I wish him well in all future endeavors.”

Rep. Jerrold Nadler, the Democratic chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, criticized Barr for how he handled the rollout of the Mueller report and “his callous disregard for civil rights [ and] his rampant politiciza­tion of the Justice Department.”

The New York Democrat added in the statement that Barr “was willing to do the president’s bidding on every front but one. Barr refused to play along with President Trump’s nonsensica­l claims to have won the election. He is now out as attorney general one month early.”

Barr, who also had served as attorney general under President George H. W. Bush from 1991 to 1993, returned to lead the Justice Department in February 2019 after Trump forced Jeff Sessions to resign, saying he wanted an attorney general who would do more to protect him.

The president had spent much of the previous two years publicly belittling Sessions for recusing himself from overseeing investigat­ions involving Trump’s campaign because he had served on it and had been such an early and ardent backer of the future president.

Sessions’ recusal left oversight of the federal investigat­ion into Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 campaign to Deputy Atty. Gen. Rod Rosenstein, who appointed Mueller shortly after Trump f ired his FBI director and admitted in a TV interview that Russia had played a role in that decision.

Trump found a defender in Barr, 70, a respected member of the Republican legal establishm­ent and a vocal advocate for expansive executive powers.

Weeks after taking the job, Barr came under f ire when Mueller completed his report on Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election, and Barr sought to summarize it for the public.

Democrats and former prosecutor­s charged that Barr’s comments, weeks before the report was declassif ied and released, mischaract­erized its findings by suggesting it exonerated the president. Mueller was more nuanced, writing: “While this report does not conclude that the president committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.”

Barr also supervised the Justice Department’s legal f ight to block congressio­nal access to witnesses and documents in several inquiries, including the House impeachmen­t proceeding­s. And he oversaw the department’s efforts to thwart congressio­nal Democrats and New York prosecutor­s from obtaining Trump’s tax returns.

In helping Trump pursue his domestic agenda, Barr launched, though later dropped, an antitrust investigat­ion into four major automakers that had reached a deal with California to clamp down on vehicle pollution.

He backed Trump’s tough immigratio­n plans and limited the ways immigrants can f ight deportatio­n. And he chastised progressiv­e prosecutor­s for being soft on crime.

Last December, Barr publicly disagreed with a report by the Justice Department’s internal watchdog, who found that the FBI was legally justified in launching its investigat­ion into potential ties between Trump associates and his 2016 campaign, and that there was no evidence that politics had played a role in its inception.

In response, Barr said the FBI had initiated an investigat­ion “on the thinnest of suspicions that, in my view, were insufficie­nt to justify the steps taken,” adding that evidence “was consistent­ly exculpator­y” of the Americans targeted.

He also tapped John Durham, a U. S. attorney in Connecticu­t, to investigat­e the origins of the Russia inquiry, and has tracked his work closely.

On the same day Barr told the Associated Press he did not see widespread election fraud, the Justice Department announced that Durham was being appointed as a special counsel to finish his work. The move was meant to ensure that the Biden administra­tion could not easily derail the investigat­ion, Justice Department officials said.

Barr has resisted calls from Republican­s to appoint a special counsel to continue the investigat­ion of Hunter Biden, the president- elect’s son, who disclosed this month that his taxes were being investigat­ed by the Justice Department. Trump and his allies spent the campaign assailing Hunter Biden’s ties to a Ukrainian gas company.

 ?? Pete Marovich EPA / Shuttersto­ck ?? ATTY. GEN. William Barr testifying in 2019. Congressio­nal reaction to his resignatio­n was mixed.
Pete Marovich EPA / Shuttersto­ck ATTY. GEN. William Barr testifying in 2019. Congressio­nal reaction to his resignatio­n was mixed.

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