New York Post

Whitaker may stay – for a bit

- Eileen AJ Connelly, Wires

Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker can hold office through June under the law President Trump used to appoint him, but he probably won’t last that long.

“I think this will be a very interim AG,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said of the replacemen­t for Jeff Sessions, who resigned on Wednesday after months of criticism from the president.

Whitaker, a Republican Party loyalist and Sessions’ chief of staff, has faced pressure from Democrats to step aside from overseeing the probe into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election led by former FBI Director Robert Mueller, because he criticized the investigat­ion before joining the Justice Department last year.

Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi said the appointmen­t “does violence to the Constituti­on” and has called on Whitaker to recuse himself from Mueller’s investigat­ion.

Some legal scholars have argued Whitaker’s appointmen­t violates the constituti­onal requiremen­t that the Senate confirm top officials like the attorney general, but others say the law he was appointed under — which allows for a 210-day term — permits temporary posts.

Whitaker has stayed out of the public debate. He sent a department­wide note after his appointmen­t in which he said, “As we move forward, I am committed to leading a fair Department with the highest ethical standards, that upholds the rule of law, and seeks justice for all Americans.”

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