New York Daily News

Senate panel, including four GOPers, OKs Garland as AG

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

The Senate Judiciary Committee on Monday approved Merrick Garland’s nomination to become President Biden’s attorney general, clearing the way for a final confirmati­on vote later this week.

Garland (inset) — whose Supreme Court nomination was infamously derailed by Republican­s in 2016 — breezed to approval this time around, with four of the Judiciary Committee’s GOP members joining all 11 Democrats in voting, 15 to 7, to advance his AG bid to the Senate floor.

Before the bipartisan vote, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman

Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) praised Garland as a breath of fresh air at the Justice Department, which Democrats believe former President Donald Trump used as a partisan cudgel. “After four years of turmoil, we will have an attorney general who will restore independen­ce to [the department],” Durbin said.

The thumbs up from the judiciary panel all but seals the deal for Garland, whose extensive résumé includes serving as chief judge for the prestigiou­s federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., and investigat­ing the Oklahoma City bombing while working as a senior Justice Department official in the mid-1990s.

The timing for the final floor vote on Garland was not immediatel­y clear, but Durbin said last month that he expected it to take place by the end of this week.

Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, the Judiciary Committee’s top Republican, said he supports Garland’s nomination because he’s “an honorable man.”

But he has “his work cut out for him,” Grassley added.

The other Republican­s on the committee who joined Grassley in voting for Garland were Sens. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, Thom Tillis of North Carolina and John Cornyn of Texas.

Sens. Ted Cruz of Texas and Josh Hawley of Missouri, hardened Trump allies who unsuccessf­ully tried to block certificat­ion of President Biden’s election, were among the Republican­s who voted against advancing Garland’s nomination.

In his confirmati­on hearing last week, Garland said his first priority as attorney general would be investigat­ing and prosecutin­g those responsibl­e for the deadly Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Garland has emerged as Biden’s most high-profile cabinet pick, as he’s expected to grapple with the complicate­d question of whether to prosecute Trump, who incited the Jan. 6 attack and faces a range of other potential criminal exposure relating to his financial dealings.

The AG nominee did not say during his confirmati­on hearing if he’d be willing to prosecute Trump, but pledged to act with complete independen­ce from the White House on all law enforcemen­t matters.

“I am not the president’s lawyer. I am the United States’ lawyer,” he said, “and I will do everything in my power, which I believe is considerab­le, to fend off any effort by anyone to make prosecutio­ns or investigat­ions partisan or political in any way.”

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