The Norwalk Hour

President sends mixed signals with new nominees

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President Donald Trump on Friday picked an establishm­ent Republican with a polished legal career to lead the Justice Department and a political loyalist and brash media personalit­y to represent the U.S. at the United Nations, underlinin­g the political tensions in a White House scrambling for a reset.

Trump said he will nominate William “Bill” Barr to serve as attorney general, putting the white-shoe lawyer back atop the Justice Department that he led under President George H.W. Bush in the early 1990s.

If confirmed, Barr would take over supervisio­n of the special counsel investigat­ion into Russian meddling that has shadowed Trump’s tenure.

Barr has criticized the probe, suggesting that it is partisan in nature because some of the prosecutor­s under Robert S. Mueller III, a Republican, had contribute­d to Democrats.

Trump also said he will nominate Heather Nauert, a former Fox News and Friends news personalit­y who has been State Department spokeswoma­n since April 2017, as U.S. ambassador to the U.N.

The president will downgrade the position to a subCabinet post, according to a White House official, reversing Trump’s previous upgrade of the job.

The choices marked the start of an expected series of high-level staff changes as Trump seeks to recover from last month’s bruising midterm elections, which saw heavy Republican losses in the House and in states, and prepares for his 2020 re-election race.

Among those reportedly on the exit ramp is John F. Kelly,

Trump’s chief of staff. The president privately indicated this week that he will pick Nick Ayers, chief of staff to Vice President Mike Pence, to replace the retired Marine four-star general.

 ?? Francois Mori / Associated Press ?? Workers carry a wooden piece to protect shop windows on the Champs-Elysees avenue on Friday, in Paris. Many shop owners across the French capital were getting ready for the violence, setting up walls with carton boards to protect their windows. The Arc de Triomphe is seen in background.
Francois Mori / Associated Press Workers carry a wooden piece to protect shop windows on the Champs-Elysees avenue on Friday, in Paris. Many shop owners across the French capital were getting ready for the violence, setting up walls with carton boards to protect their windows. The Arc de Triomphe is seen in background.

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