Two lawyers—Neal K. Katyal and George T. Onway III— wrote this opinion article in the New York Times. George Conway happens to be married to Kellyanne Conway, Trump’s Senior Advisor.
What now seems an eternity ago, the conservative law professor Steven Calabresi published an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal in May arguing that Robert Mueller’s appointment as special counsel was unconstitutional. His article got a lot of attention, and it wasn’t long before President Trump picked up the argument, tweeting that “the Appointment of the Special Counsel is totally UNCONSTITUTIONAL!”
Professor Calabresi’s article was based on the Appointments Clause of the Constitution, Article II, Section 2, Clause 2. Under that provision, so-called principal officers of the United States must be nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate under its “Advice and Consent” powers.
He argued that Mr. Mueller was a principal officer because he is exercising significant law enforcement authority and that since he has not been confirmed by the Senate, his appointment was unconstitutional. As one of us argued at the time, he was wrong. What makes an officer a principal officer is that he or she reports only to the president. No one else in government is that person’s boss. But Mr. Mueller reports to Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general. So, Mr. Mueller is what is known as an inferior officer, not a principal one, and his appointment without Senate approval was valid.
But Professor Calabresi and the president were right about the core principle. A principal officer must be confirmed by the Senate. And that has a very, very significant consequence today.
It means that President Trump’s installation of Matthew Whitaker as acting attorney general of the United States after forcing the resignation of Jeff Sessions is unconstitutional. It’s illegal. And it means that anything Mr. Whitaker does, or tries to do, in that position is invalid.
Much of the commentary about Mr. Whitaker’s appointment has focused on all sorts of technical points about the Vacancies Reform Act and Justice Department succession statutes. But the flaw in the appointment of Mr. Whitaker, who was Mr. Sessions’s chief of staff at the Justice Department, runs much deeper. It defies one of the explicit checks and balances set out in the Constitution, a provision designed to protect us all against the centralization of government power.
If you don’t believe us, then take it from Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, whom President Trump once called his “favorite” sitting justice. Last year, the Supreme Court examined the question of whether the general counsel of the National Labor Relations Board had been lawfully appointed to his job without Senate confirmation. The Supreme Court held the appointment invalid on a statutory ground.
Justice Thomas agreed with the judgment, but wrote separately to emphasize that even if the statute had allowed the appointment, the Constitution’s Appointments Clause would not have. The officer in question was a principal officer, he concluded. And the public interest protected by the Appointments Clause was a critical one: The Constitution’s drafters, Justice Thomas argued, “recognized the serious risk for abuse and corruption posed by permitting one person to fill every office in the government.” Which is why, he pointed out, the framers provided for advice and consent of the Senate.
What goes for a mere lawyer at the N.L.R.B. goes in spades for the attorney general of the United States, the head of the Justice Department and one of the most important people in the federal government. It is one thing to appoint an acting underling, like an acting solicitor general, a post one of us held. But those officials are always supervised by higher-ups; in the case of the solicitor general, by the attorney general and deputy attorney general, both confirmed by the Senate.
Mr. Whitaker has not been named to some junior post one or two levels below the Justice Department’s top job. He has now been vested with the law enforcement authority of the entire United States government, including the power to supervise Senate-confirmed officials like the deputy attorney general, the solicitor general and all United States attorneys.
We cannot tolerate such an evasion of the Constitution’s very explicit, textually precise design. Senate confirmation exists for a simple, and good, reason. Constitutionally, Matthew Whitaker is a nobody. His job as Mr. Sessions’s chief of staff did not require Senate confirmation. (Yes, he was confirmed as a federal prosecutor in Iowa, in 2004, but President Trump can’t cut and paste that old, lapsed confirmation to today.) For the president to install Mr. Whitaker as our chief law enforcement officer is to betray the entire structure of our charter document.
In times of crisis, interim appointments need to be made. Cabinet officials die, and wars and other tragic events occur. It is very difficult to see how the current situation comports with those situations. And even if it did, there are officials readily at hand, including the deputy attorney general and the solicitor general, who were nominated by President Trump and confirmed by the Senate. Either could step in as acting attorney general, both constitutionally and statutorily.
Because Mr. Whitaker has not undergone the process of Senate confirmation, there has been no mechanism for scrutinizing whether he has the character and ability to evenhandedly enforce the law in such a position of grave responsibility. The public is entitled to that assurance, especially since Mr. Whitaker’s only supervisor is President Trump himself, and the president is hopelessly compromised by the Mueller investigation. That is why adherence to the requirements of the Appointments Clause is so important here, and always.
As we wrote last week, the Constitution is a bipartisan document, written for the ages to guard against wrongdoing by officials of any party. Mr. Whitaker’s installation makes a mockery of our Constitution and our founders’ ideals. As Justice Thomas’s opinion in the N.L.R.B. case reminds us, the Constitution’s framers “had lived under a form of government that permitted arbitrary governmental acts to go unchecked.” He added “they knew that liberty could be preserved only by ensuring that the powers of government would never be consolidated in one body.”
We must heed those words today.
Neal K. Katyal (@neal_katyal) was an acting solicitor general under President Barack Obama and is a lawyer at Hogan Lovells in Washington. George T. Conway III (@gtconway3d) is a litigator at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz in New York.
Please Send this information to Senator Schumer!
Sent from my iPad
>
Why? So he can bungle this and sell out even more democratic principles? Schumer will only do what his Wall Street masters allow him to do. Them or AIPAC. He won’t do a damn thing about this other than bellow a sanctimonious whine.
So you would suggest what? Is the attorney general’s nomination sent through the judicial committee? Senator Diane Feinstein? Either we follow the procedures provided or we revolt. I am not ready for revolution. Certainly we can make a loud noise, so maybe someone with some legal authority puts on their big boy pants, but I am not at all sure what you expect. I can understand the frustration; I feel it, too, and I am scared but I am not at all sure what you want to accomplish. Perhaps the push should be for campaign finance reform, so politicians no longer will be tempted by high roller donors of any persuasion.
Let’s look at it the other way. What can Schumer do? What has Schumer ever done to oppose this dictator in an effective way? As long as banks and AIPAC are covered, Schumer’s other actions are window dressing.
I doubt Wall St is interested in a constitutional crisis. Schumer has already called for Whitaker to recuse himself. Congress will move to protect Mueller & the investigation docts as soon as new Dem members take office. Between now & then, the move for Dem congressmen & the public is limited to a roar of disapproval.
speduktr, “Perhaps the push should be for campaign finance reform, so politicians no longer will be tempted by high roller donors of any persuasion.”
Hear, hear!!!
This President acting illegally? What a surprise! So out of character for him! LOL.
The President at his press conference yesterday:
“And Barbara Comstock was another one . . . she didn’t want to have any embrace. . . . Peter Roskam didn’t want the embrace. Erick Paulsen didn’t want the embrace. . . . There are some of the people that, you know, decided for their own reason not to embrace.”
Who talks like this?
I wondered whether I was listening to the President of the United States or to John Gotti.
He sounds like a mob boss. Remember when he predicted (wrongly) that his fixer MIchael Cohen “wouldn’t flip”? Then he did, and Boss Trump expressed gratitude to Manafort for keeping silent. Is this another season of “The Godfather”?
The Don
Don Cheeto Trumpbalone
Trump has surrounded himself with yahoos
Dump’s actions are right out of Hitler’s Playbook.
Rump is a bully. That’s his MO.
But wait, there’s more, from Bloomberg: Matthew Whitaker, the Justice Department lawyer who was named acting attorney general by President Donald Trump, sat on an advisory board of a company that was accused by U.S. regulators last year of bilking consumers out of millions of dollars.
The Federal Trade Commission won a court order halting an invention-promotion scheme run by a Florida-based company called World Patent Marketing that the agency said falsely promised to patent and market people’s inventions for fees. The company then threatened people with legal action when they complained about its practices, according to the agency.
Whitaker was named to World Patent Marketing’s advisory board in 2014, according to a press release. He said in a statement at the time that the company was a “trusted partner to many inventors that believe in the American dream” and praised its “innovative products and dynamic leadership team.”
The FTC had a different view. It said consumers paid thousands of dollars and were strung along for months or even years. Many ended up in debt or lost their life savings with nothing to show for it, the agency said.
In some cases, World Patent Marketing threatened legal action to discourage consumers from publishing negative reviews, according to the FTC.
One customer who sought a refund and filed a complaint with the Better Business Bureau, for example, received a letter from the company’s lawyer that said seeking a refund was extortion under Florida law and, “since you used email to make your threats, you would be subject to a federal extortion charge, which carries a term of imprisonment of up to two years and potential criminal fines.”
The Justice Department declined to comment about Whitaker’s role in the company.
Trump named Whitaker as acting attorney general Wednesday after he forced Jeff Sessions to resign. Whitaker had been Session’s chief of staff and has been critical of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s inquiry into Russian election meddling.
Whitaker will be the new verb of 2018. We should have a contest to come up with some appropriate definitions.
They should hire some ordinary folks like us to vet these characters. Christie is on the list for AG.
He resonates with Trump because he’s a crook and con man…..just like Trump.
No, Christie is not like Trump in those regards. The similarity is in political maneuvering/ bullying, & NY/NJ lingo. Christie is smarter, craftier, and more politic than Trump. Law has been his life; he has skated close a couple of times but has a healthy respect for it, unlike Trump.
These two have oversized egos, & bump heads terribly. Of the various barely-qualified tools Trump might nominate to railroad Mueller, Christie might be a better choice for protecting the public merely because he is self-protective, ambitious, and can’t bear being dominated.
Do not forget Bridgegate, where Christie’s ego was so vast that he closed down a major traffic artery for days to punish the Democratic Mayor of Fort Lee, NJ, for not endorsing him. When fingers were pointed,he claimed he knew nothing about it and let his executive assistant, Bridget Kelly, take the blame. A single mother of four, she got the jail sentence that Christie deserved.
Very true, & that makes him a s-g [insert MWaters’ fave curse], as well as a probable co-conspirator who could have served some time had there been enough evidence against him– & regardless, as govr, should have called it off pronto. A serious lapse in judgment, showing he thought it a dirty trick rather than a threat to public safety. I don’t think that qualifies him as a crook and con-man tho, which Trump’s career shows he is. And I think I would still rather have him as AG than a stooge who will kow-tow to Trump & mindlessly do his bidding. [But what a choice!– thanks, Trump.]
Trump defended Whitaker as a “very well respected man in the law enforcement community” but claimed he does not know him personally.
Opps. Now Trump has said that he knows Whitaker. The Orange One does have fluctuating memory. On again and then off again. It is a sign of his great intelligence.
…………
Trump on Fox News Last Month: ‘I Know Matt Whitaker’
“I don’t know Matt Whitaker,” President Donald Trump insisted to reporters before departing to Paris Friday morning. Yet, last month, during an appearance on Fox & Friends, when host Steve Doocy asked the president specifically about a Washington Post report that suggested he might replace his Attorney General Jeff Sessions with Whitaker, Trump replied, “Well, I never talk about that, but I can tell you Matt Whitaker’s a great guy. I mean, I know Matt Whitaker.” This week, The New York Times reported that Whitaker was a frequent visitor to the Oval Office in recent months and is “said to have an easy chemistry with Mr. Trump.”
The mark of a stable genius.
“The Orange One does have fluctuating memory. On again and then off again. It is a sign of his great intelligence.” 😀
And, the co was shut down as a bilking scam by the FTC & assessed a hefty fine. Whitaker was not only an “Advisor,” he made dorky videos hawking the co’s service, AND sent an email to a disgruntled customer, accusing him of “bribery or extortion,” threatening that if the customer filed a complaint w/BBB there could be “serious civil and criminal consequences for you”– he actually invoked his status as “a former US Attorney for the Southern District of Iowa”…!!
It’s worth repeating:
Trump and the Republican party – and their supporters – represent a clear and present danger to the Constitution and to the republic.
democracy
I find that the clear and present danger to our democracy – our republic – is the lack of understanding the Constitution and our public schools not requiring civics.
a prime example is the View –
WATCH: Joy Behar Claims Democrats Lost Senate Races Due To Gerrymandering
By Bre Payton
Joy Behar said Democrats lost key senate races because of gerrymandering in a segment on ABC’s ‘The View’ Wednesday morning.
Full article
For the hard of hearing: gerrymandering is about Congress, i.e., re-drawing congressional district borders. Senators’ “district” is the whole state [whose borders don’t get ‘re-drawn.’] Joy must have been having a senior moment.
Would civics in K12 prevent that? Don’t you know people who forget what they learned in school but bloviate erroneously later in life?
Whitaker took an active role in a company that was found guilty of misleading investors and ordered by a federal court to repay $25 million and close.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/before-he-led-the-justice-department-matthew-g-whitaker-promoted-company-accused-of-deceiving-clients/2018/11/08/f46e6db8-e380-11e8-ab2c-b31dcd53ca6b_story.html?utm_term=.5fc89cdf8f25&wpisrc=nl_rainbow&wpmm=1
When federal investigators were digging into an invention-promotion company accused of fraud by customers, they sought information in 2017 from a prominent member of the company’s advisory board, according to two people familiar with the probe: Matthew G. Whitaker, a former U.S. attorney in Iowa.
It is unclear how Whitaker — who was appointed acting attorney general by President Trump on Wednesday — responded to a Federal Trade Commission subpoena to his law firm.
In the end, the FTC filed a complaint against Miami-based World Patent Marketing, accusing it of misleading investors and falsely promising that it would help them patent and profit from their inventions, according to court filings.
In May of this year, a federal court in Florida ordered the company to pay a settlement of more than $25 million and close up shop, records show. The company did not admit or deny wrongdoing.
Whitaker’s sudden elevation this week to replace fired Attorney General Jeff Sessions has put new scrutiny on his involvement with the shuttered company, whose advisory board he joined in 2014, shortly after making a failed run for U.S. Senate in Iowa.
At the time, he was also running a conservative watchdog group with ties to other powerful nonprofits on the right and was beginning to develop a career as a Trump-friendly cable television commentator.
World Patent Marketing — founded by Miami businessman Scott J. Cooper, who had donated $2,600 to Whitaker’s Senate campaign — prominently highlighted Whitaker’s résumé as a former U.S. attorney, which helped lend the company credibility.
But Whitaker seems to have been more than a figurehead. He spoke about inventions of the company’s clients in online videos — including a special hot-tub seat for people with mobility issues. He also penned a response to at least one complaint — writing a threatening email in which he cited his role as a former U.S. attorney, according to court filings….
“Because Mr. Whitaker has not undergone the process of Senate confirmation…”
The GOP is in control of the Senate. They are mostly lapdogs of Trump. The Senate would confirm anyone that Trump appoints. It is also possible that nobody will confirm Whitaker because nobody with power in our government will speak up and say an appointment is necessary. After all, Trump excels in not following laws. Our Orange One works to destroy. Whitaker was picked because he believes Mueller has gone too far.
Cynicism is understandable after nearly 2 yrs of Trump. However, there are reasons to expect that this appt will come to naugt.
This is not just another case of Trump ignoring unwritten norms, where WH & Senate lackeys can stand back & let it pass. There are laws of succession designed precisely for the occasion of sudden shifts [death, firing, resignation, war– et al] reqg major office-holders to be replaced w/ Senate-confirmed lower office-holders in line to fill in as Acting AG [Asst AG Rosenstein and Solicitor Gen Noel Francisco]. As the article notes, that’s part of essential Constitutional checks & balances; any action this illegally-appointed actor takes will be legally invalid.
Beyond the obvious legal roadblock: if this invalid actor makes any move against the Mueller investigation, that adds to Trump’s already potentially-impeachable offense of firing Comey for refusing to snuff out the investigation against his pres campaign [obstruction of justice]. Here, he replaces a recused AG (who can’t oversee the investigation), & leapfrogs the legal successors (who can) w/an acting AG who has stated on record multiple times that the investigation itself is w/o grounds & Trump should be cleared. Which makes Whitaker a priori unfit to oversee the investigation.
The wheels of justice may grind slowly, but they do grind. Trump is tempting fate w/this move. It may be a bluff (he’s known for that). But if he fears the outcome of the investigation sufficiently to precipitate a constitutional crisis, the blowback could be impeachment by the Dem-majority congress we just elected.
Plus, the WSJ reported tonight that a company that Whitaker was involved in is under criminal investigation by the FBI. How about that? The nation’s chief law enforcement officer investigated by the FBI!
Why Matthew Whitaker Is The Wrong Choice To Replace Jeff Sessions — At Exactly The Wrong Time
WASHINGTON — Matthew Whitaker, President Trump’s handpicked selection to replace Jeff Sessions as attorney general, is the wrong choice for the job at exactly the wrong time.
Of course, from Trump’s point of view, that is the point. He ousts Sessions, whose alleged disloyalty Trump has bemoaned for months. Under the ordinary rules of succession at the Justice Department, Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein would take over as acting attorney general until a successor is confirmed. But instead of allowing that to happen, Trump installs Whitaker, Sessions’s chief of staff and, more to the point, a lawyer who has expressed doubt about, if not outright hostility to, the investigation by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III.
For Trump, this is a problem solved. Out: an attorney general who, following Justice Department rules and heeding the advice of the department’s ethics professionals, recused himself from the Mueller probe. In: Whitaker, who before joining the department announced to the world how he would deal with the meddlesome Mueller….
Source : https://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2018/11/08/why_matthew_whitaker_is_the_wrong_choice_to_replace_jeff_sessions_–_at_exactly_the_wrong_time_138595.html
Indictments? Final report? White House braces for Mueller
By ERIC TUCKER, JONATHAN LEMIRE and CHAD DAY
yesterday
…Trump had enjoyed Whitaker’s cable TV appearances — including one on CNN in which he suggested that the Mueller probe be starved of resources — and the two men soon struck a bond. Trump told associates that he felt that Whitaker would be “loyal” and would not have recused himself from the Russia probe as Sessions had done, according to two Republicans close to the White House not authorized to speak publicly about private conversations.
Despite demands from Democrats that he recuse because of his past comments, Whitaker showed no signs Thursday that he intended to do so…
https://apnews.com/a42b3eb18ef842d29d4772ee4922c731
It’s Mueller Time.
This is off topic but important.
….
Trump to fly to Paris but will miss Macron peace forum..the Guardian
No talks with Putin planned as US president joins world leaders for armistice tributes
On his first foreign trip since the midterm elections, Donald Trump will fly to France on Friday night for the centennial of the end of the first world war – but will skip a summit on global cooperation in Paris, which begins the same day.
The US president, whose power in Washington has been curtailed by the loss of the House of Representatives to the Democrats, will hold a one-on-one meeting with Emmanuel Macron and attend memorial ceremonies and meals with fellow leaders, but will leave before the Paris Peace Forum, which Macron has organised as the focal point of the gathering.
The French president said the aim of the forum was to make sure the miscalculations of the world powers that led to the the 1914-18 war were avoided by more collective decision-making in the 21st century….
Thomas Wright, the director of the Centre on the United States and Europe at the Brookings Institution, said: “It would would be odd for Trump and John Bolton to show up at a forum for global governance. Normally you would want the president of the US at an occasion like this, but Trump would really be the skunk at the picnic. His view of multilateral cooperation is that it damages sovereignty.”…
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/nov/09/trump-paris-macron-peace-forum?CMP=share_btn_link
Oh my. Look at this, from HuffPost:
Andrew Napolitano, senior judicial analyst for Fox News, said on Wednesday that he believed Trump’s appointment of Whitaker was illegal.
“Under the law, the person running the Department of Justice must have been approved by the United States Senate for some previous position. Even on an interim post,” Napolitano told Fox News’ Dana Perino.
Watch Trump rush through a new Attorney General ASAP. Watch McConnell grease the path.
This is the future of the US according to Trump’s plan for ‘ordinary’ people. He worships Putin and this is what is happening in Russia.
……………………………………
Video: How Russians Carpool
If you think you’re good at saving gas by carpooling to work then you’ve got a lot of work to do to get as good as these Russian workers who carpool to the job site.
Башкирская бригада едет на работу/ Bashkir team goes to work
Published on Sep 28, 2016
In other words,
Because Justice Beer-Holder has undergone the process of Senate confirmation, there has been a mechanism for scrutinizing whether he has the character and ability to evenhandedly enforce the law in such a position of grave responsibility.
As Justice Thomas’s opinion in the N.L.R.B. case reminds us, the Constitution’s framers “had lived under a form of government that permitted arbitrary governmental acts to go unchecked.” He added “they knew that liberty could be preserved only by ensuring that the powers of government would never be consolidated in one body.”
SO, “they” consolidated the validation of “principal officers of the United States”
to ONE body, the SENATE …
Appointments Clause of the Constitution, Article II, Section 2, Clause 2. Under that provision, so-called principal officers of the United States must be nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate under its “Advice and Consent” powers.
“A judge in Montana blocked the X-L Pipeline, citing climate change.”
Linda: There are still some decent minded judges in this country. What will happen as Trump continues to pick people who aren’t qualified or who only consider the amount of money some corporation will make?
I’m sure this will go to different judges until one says the pipeline needs to be built. We really need leaks of the filthiest oil that has ever been found. Great for the environment.
There are some good people working against Trump. The Orange Buffoon continues to fill judicial openings. At some point, justice will not prevail.
……………………….
Groups sue Trump over order blocking asylum claims
Civil rights groups are suing the Trump administration over its order blocking certain immigrants from claiming asylum.
In a complaint filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California on Friday, the American Civil Liberties Union, Southern Poverty Law Center and Center for Constitutional Rights allege that the Trump administration is violating immigration law as well as the federal statute that governs the way administrative agencies can issue rules.
Senator Todd Young [R-IN] is back again saying nothing. Why bother to send out a form letter if there is nothing to say?
…..
Dear Ms. Ring,
Sincerely,
Todd Young
United States Senator
This is just plain freaky. Now a government can have total control of what is broadcast on TV. There will be no moral or ethical considerations from a robot that spews anything. What happens if this AI comes to the US? I can see Trump wanting this type of control of the masses.
………………………………
Xinhua’s first English AI anchor makes debut
New China TV
Published on Nov 7, 2018
Xinhua’s first English AI anchor makes debut at the World Internet Conference that opens in Wuzhen, China Wednesday.
Two AI anchors are joining China’s state-run news agency Xinhua. “The two anchors, one that speaks in English and another in Chinese, have the likeness of some of Xinhua’s human anchors, but their voices, facial expressions and mouth movements are synthesized and animated using deep learning techniques,” reports Engadget. From the report:
“AI anchors have officially become members of the Xinhua News Agency reporting team,” the agency said. “They will work with other anchors to bring you authoritative, timely and accurate news information in both Chinese and English.” China’s South China Morning Post reports that the AI anchors are available through Xinhua’s English and Chinese apps, its TV webpage and its WeChat public account. The technology behind the anchors is being provided by search engine company Sogou.
Xinhua says its AI anchors can deliver the news with the “same effect” as that of human reporters. But if you watch the video, that isn’t exactly true. It’s pretty clear you’re watching a non-human anchor as the mouth movements and facial expressions aren’t quite human-like, and the voice can come off as a little robotic.
carol–as to the Russian “carpooling” video: this is already being done in the U.S.
It’s called taking the lousy bus service (or subways or els)–packin’ ’em in, waiting in the cold w/ inadequate “heat” lamps &, no, the trains DON’T run on time.
Also, the fares are outrageous: you DON’T get what you pay for.
retiredbutmissthekids: I read a news item a number of months back that featured a Japanese fellow who apologized for the commuter train that was 20 seconds early. There was a photo of a beautiful train that most likely doesn’t exist anywhere in this country.
The old thing I ride to downtown Chicago creaks and has to be many, many, many years old. I haven’t ridden it many times but I have had to wait in cold weather when an announcement comes on telling about how it will be delayed. The delays are NEVER measured in seconds.
I feel sorry for people who are poor and have to depend upon rickety bus service, sometimes riding two buses in the early hours to get to work as someone’s maid or to work for starvation wages in a fast food place. It is the wealthy and politicians who degrade these people.
………………………………
Apology after Japanese train departs 20 seconds early
16 November 2017
A rail company in Japan has apologised after one of its trains departed 20 seconds early.
Management on the Tsukuba Express line between Tokyo and the city of Tsukuba say they “sincerely apologise for the inconvenience” caused.
In a statement, the company said the train had been scheduled to leave at 9:44:40 local time but left at 9:44:20.
The mistake happened because staff had not checked the timetable, the company statement said.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-42009839
Trump: “You know, it’s a shame that no matter who I put in, they go after them.”
Is the Orange Hair Monster really that stupid? He bends the law to protect his corruption and then complains if anyone disagrees.
……………………………
Matthew Whitaker: An Attack Dog With Ambition Beyond Protecting Trump
President Trump ousted his attorney general and put Mr. Whitaker, a partisan defender who insisted there was no collusion between Russia and the Trump campaign, in charge of the Justice Department.
WASHINGTON — President Trump first noticed Matthew G. Whitaker on CNN in the summer of 2017 and liked what he saw — a partisan defender who insisted there was no collusion between Russia and the Trump campaign. So that July, the White House counsel, Donald F. McGahn II, interviewed Mr. Whitaker about joining the president’s team as a legal attack dog against the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III.
At that point, the White House passed, leaving Mr. Whitaker, 49, to continue his media tour, writing on CNN’s website that Mr. Mueller’s investigation — which he had once called “crazy” — had gone too far.
Fifteen months later, the attack dog is in charge. With little ceremony on Wednesday, Mr. Trump ousted Attorney General Jeff Sessions and put Mr. Whitaker, Mr. Sessions’s chief of staff, in charge of the Justice Department — and Mr. Mueller’s Russia investigation.
People close to Mr. Trump believe that he sent Mr. Whitaker to the department in part to limit the fallout from the Mueller investigation, one presidential adviser said.
White House aides and other people close to Mr. Trump anticipate that Mr. Whitaker will rein in any report summarizing Mr. Mueller’s investigation and will not allow the president to be subpoenaed…
The decision to fire Mr. Sessions and replace him with Mr. Whitaker had been in the works since September, when the president began asking friends and associates if they thought it would be a good idea, according to people familiar with the discussions…
The goal was not unlike the first time the White House considered hiring Mr. Whitaker. As attorney general, he could wind down Mr. Mueller’s inquiry like the president wanted.
Mr. McGahn, for one, was a big proponent of the idea. So was Leonard A. Leo, the executive vice president of the Federalist Society who regularly advises Mr. Trump on judges and other legal matters. Mr. Whitaker had also developed a strong rapport with John F. Kelly, the White House chief of staff. Nick Ayers, Vice President Mike Pence’s chief of staff, was a fan, too….
“You know, it’s a shame that no matter who I put in, they go after them,” Mr. Trump said before leaving for Paris….
The Senate is composed of sycophants so Whitaker will be confirmed…unless the Senate considers what Trump did to be appropriate and no confirmation is required. Trump is above the law and makes it up as he goes. Dictator-in-waiting and Pussy-Grabber-in-Chief. We are definitely a ‘shining light’ to the rest of the world.
………………………..
There is no way this man should be running the Justice Department..WaPo
By Editorial Board November 9 at 7:59 PM
IS MATTHEW G. WHITAKER the legitimate acting attorney general? From approximately the second President Trump ousted Attorney General Jeff Sessions and tapped Mr. Whitaker to temporarily exercise the office’s vast authority, legal experts have sparred over whether Mr. Trump can unilaterally elevate someone from a role that does not require Senate confirmation to one that does. But regardless of whether the promotion is legal, it is very clear that it is unwise. Mr. Whitaker is unfit for the job.
Several prominent legal scholars point out that the Constitution demands that “principal officers” of the United States must undergo Senate confirmation. A 19th-century Supreme Court case suggests there may be limited room for temporary fill-ins, but Mr. Whitaker’s appointment is hardly so temporary; he could serve for most of the rest of Mr. Trump’s first term. Even if Mr. Whitaker’s promotion is constitutional, Congress passed a law governing Justice Department succession that also seems to prohibit Mr. Whitaker’s ascent. The department has a capable, Senate-confirmed deputy attorney general in Rod J. Rosenstein; he should be running the department in the absence of a permanent replacement.
The Senate above all should be offended by the president’s end run around its authority. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) should demand hearings and consider filing a lawsuit. Instead, he is helping to establish a troubling precedent, saying only that he expects Mr. Whitaker to be a “very interim AG.” Yet no random official should be endowed with all the powers of an office as powerful as attorney general, meant for a Senate-vetted individual, even for a relatively short time.
And Mr. Whitaker is worse than random. It took less than 24 hours for material to emerge suggesting he could not survive even a rudimentary vetting.
First, there are Mr. Whitaker’s statements criticizing the Russia probe of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III. At the least, they require him to consult Justice Department ethics counsel about whether he can oversee the inquiry with a plausible appearance of evenhandedness. He will do immediate and lasting harm to the Justice Department’s reputation, and to the nation, if he assumes the role of president’s personal henchman and impedes the Mueller probe.
Then there is Mr. Whitaker’s connection to a defunct patent promotion company the Federal Trade Commission called “an invention-promotion scam that has bilked thousands of consumers out of millions of dollars.” Mr. Whitaker served on its board and once threatened a complaining customer, lending the weight of his former position as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Iowa to the company’s scheme.
Finally, and fundamentally most damning, is Mr. Whitaker’s expressed hostility to Marbury v. Madison, a central case — the central case — in the American constitutional system. It established an indispensable principle: The courts decide what is and is not constitutional. Without Marbury, there would be no effective judicial check on the political branches, no matter how egregious their actions.
If the Senate were consulted, it is impossible to imagine Mr. Whitaker getting close to the attorney general’s office. He should not be there now. …
I never can get over the eloquence with which Trump expresses his twisted mind. Nobody who talks like that could ever make it through college. Is he demented or suffering from the early stages of Alzheimer’s?
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Trump’s description of his new AG.: “Matt Whitaker is a great guy, a good guy, I’m told. He worked for Attorney General Sessions. Never worked for me. I don’t know the guy. Never heard of the guy until he came to work for Sessions. A great guy. A good guy though. I don’t know the guy. Never heard of the guy until he had worked for Sessions. I don’t know the guy.”
I think that means Whitaker’s Not long for the job
Oh well, at least we still have Stormy Daniels and Michael Avenatti to get rid of Trump!
Keep up with the magical thinking about Mueller and impeachment, or Stormy, or the 25th Amendment or the Emoluments Clause bringing down Trump, and watch what happens in 2020.
I guess people will do anything to believe that some Deus Ex Machina will descend and return us to the glory days of Obama and the status quo ante, but it just ain’t so: getting rid of this Trump, and preventing the next one (who will make you nostalgic for the current incarnation, because he’ll smooth over Trump’s rough edges and be even more dangerous) requires more than a naive faith in the FBI and intelligence agencies, and a complete mis-reading of history and the political dynamics behind previous impeachments…
You’ll notice that, to their credit, the Democrats completely ignored the Russia! Russia! Russia! narrative during this election, because (hopefully) they realized it’s a political loser, but all it took was Trump firing the execrable Jeff Sessions to bring them back into line.
More trolling and mis-direction from Trump, and the muppets at MoveOn respond predictably…
Why is the Orange Hair Monster working so hard to stop the investigation if there is NOTHING to hide? Why is Trump stating that he won’t allow investigations into his tax refunds? GUILTY AND GUILTY! We just need to learn where the facts are hidden and why.
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Dems race to protect Mueller probe
BY MELANIE ZANONA AND OLIVIA BEAVERS – 11/10/18 12:01 PM EST
House Democrats are racing to protect special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia probe, and they’re not waiting until they assume the majority to do so….
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) organized an emergency conference call on Thursday between rank-and-file Democrats and the top members on investigative committees to discuss President Trump’s decision to fire Attorney General Jeff Sessions and replace him with an official who has repeatedly criticized the Mueller probe…
Democrats also sent a flurry of letters this week to Whitaker and Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) demanding the preservation of critical documents and seeking answers about Sessions’s firing. They want to know how the shake-up at the highest level of the Justice Department will impact the special counsel’s investigation.
They are also increasingly interested in examining the circumstances surrounding Trump’s appointment of Whitaker, whom the president recently denied knowing personally.
“We can do several things,” Nadler said on CNN. “We have already sent letters to a lot of people in the Justice Department demanding preservation of all relevant documents. Destruction of those documents would be a crime after that notice.”
Across the Capitol, some Senate Democrats are considering suing the administration over Whitaker’s appointment, though an aide warned that they are still researching the idea…
https://thehill.com/homenews/house/416023-dems-race-to-protect-mueller-probe
Very informative. Clearly explains the issue.
Republicans sure are sticking up for Trump. It’s hard to understand why people think Trump is great. I’ve read many thoughts on the subject and the one that made the most sense to me is that this is a cult, and the leader can do no wrong. The ability to think objectively has long passed.
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CNN: On Sunday, Reps. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.), the likely incoming chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, and Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), the likely incoming chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, threatened to subpoena Whitaker.
“If he doesn’t recuse himself, if he has any involvement whatsoever in this Russia probe, we are going to find out whether he made commitments to the president about the probe, whether he is serving as a back channel to the president or his lawyers about the probe, whether he’s doing anything to interfere with the probe. Mr. Whitaker needs to understand that he will be called to answer. And any role that he plays will be exposed to the public.” – Schiff on NBC’s “Meet the Press”
Trump has not said when he intends to nominate a full-time replacement for former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who was forced out last week.
House Democrats are expected to push legislation to protect Mueller, although that effort would likely get stuck in the GOP-held Senate.
“Mueller is not going to be stopped. It’s going to continue and it should continue … If it continues … why protect something that’s actually continuing?” – Sen. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.) on NBC’s “Meet the Press”
Still, Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) is threatening a government shutdown by tying legislation protecting Mueller to a must-pass spending bill next month.