- President-elect has vowed to overhaul Justice Department
- Several Republican senators express skepticism over choice
President-elect Donald Trump is nominating Representative Matt Gaetz to be attorney general, tapping a polarizing and embattled lawmaker to reshape US law enforcement and carry out his agenda on immigration, crime and hot-button social issues.
The Florida Republican, the subject of a House inquiry into sexual misconduct allegations, promptly resigned from Congress, effectively ending that investigation because he is no longer a sitting member of the chamber. Gaetz has denied wrongdoing.
Gaetz, 42, has been a steady ally of Trump since he left the
However, he has remained under investigation by the House Ethics Committee. The panel said in June that its members were continuing to look into allegations that he engaged in sexual misconduct, took illicit drugs and accepted improper gifts. Gaetz said in September that he was no longer voluntarily cooperating with the probe.
The committee declined to comment on whether a report on the inquiry would be issued soon. The New York Times and other news organizations reported that the panel was prepared to release the report on Friday
On Wednesday night, House Speaker
Gaetz’s office didn’t respond to requests for comment.
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“Matt will root out the systemic corruption at DOJ, and return the Department to its true mission of fighting Crime, and upholding our Democracy and Constitution,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social.
Republican Surprise
The appointment will test Trump’s sway over Senate Republicans, who will take control of the chamber in January and must confirm the president-elect’s nominees. The GOP is expected to hold a 53-47 seat majority, so it would take just four Republican senators to sink his nomination. Multiple Republican senators signaled their skepticism of the choice, laying bare the confirmation challenge ahead.
“Gaetz won’t get confirmed. Everybody knows that,” former House Speaker
WATCH: Former House Speaker McCarthy discusses his expectations for Trump’s second term, and the President-elect’s nominations of various posts. Source: Bloomberg
When asked by reporters about the choice,
Traditionally, the department and the attorney general have maintained a distance from the White House, especially when it comes to making decisions about which sensitive investigations and prosecutions to conduct or end. Measures intended to insulate the department from politics and interference were put in place following the Watergate scandal in the 1970s.
President
During his campaign, Trump repeatedly said he plans to go after “the enemy from within” the US. He has also railed against the two federal indictments against him secured by Special Counsel Jack Smith for allegedly trying to overturn the 2020 election and illegally retaining classified documents. Several long-term career Justice officials also worked on those cases.
The Justice Department includes several agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation that the president-elect has criticized as well. Trump could move to fire FBI Director
Trump’s Attorneys General
Republican attorney
Additionally, Trump comes into office after the US Supreme Court ruled that presidents have broad immunity from prosecution for any actions they take in their official capacity — a new precedent that’s still being defined.
Trump’s first attorney general, former Republican Senator
That led to the 2017 appointment of Special Counsel
His second attorney general,
But Barr lashed out at Trump over tweets and public comments about ongoing Justice Department cases, saying it was making his job “impossible.” Barr ultimately also declared there was no fraud in the 2020 election significant enough to change the results and he then left in December 2020.
(Updates with committee report, in fifth paragraph.)
--With assistance from
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To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Megan Scully, John Harney
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