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		Senate Democrats weigh lawsuit over Trump 
		Justice Department appointment 
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		 [November 10, 2018] 
		By David Morgan and Jonathan Landay 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senate 
		Democrats are considering legal action over President Donald Trump's 
		appointment of a new acting attorney general, congressional sources said 
		on Friday, as some outside experts called the move unconstitutional.
 
 Trump on Wednesday named Matthew Whitaker to replace former Attorney 
		General Jeff Sessions, who was forced out after months of attacks by 
		Trump for recusing himself from an ongoing probe into Russian meddling 
		in the 2016 presidential election.
 
 The move made Whitaker supervisor of the investigation, which has hung 
		over Trump's presidency. Whitaker has criticized the probe in the past 
		as too wide-ranging, which has raised concerns among Democrats that 
		Sessions' ouster and Whitaker's appointment might be precursors to Trump 
		moving to end it.
 
 Senate Democrats were considering suing Trump, the sources said, on the 
		grounds that, in naming Whitaker, the president ignored a statutory line 
		of succession at the Justice Department and deprived senators of their 
		constitutional "advice and consent" role on some presidential 
		appointments.
 
 "The only two paths to that office are regular succession, and advice 
		(and) consent," said a source close to the Senate Judiciary Committee.
 
		
		 
		
 Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal told Reuters late on Friday he was 
		"considering action that might be brought against an interim appointment 
		that violates the normal statutory line of succession and raises very 
		serious constitutional questions."
 
 He said he was speaking only for himself and he hoped Republicans might 
		join as plaintiffs if a lawsuit goes forward.
 
 The Appointments Clause of the U.S. Constitution states that some senior 
		government officials, known as "principal officers," must be confirmed 
		by the Senate.
 
 A spokesman for Senate Judiciary chairman Chuck Grassley said Trump had 
		the authority to appoint Whitaker as acting attorney general 
		temporarily, even though he had not been confirmed by the Senate.
 
 Such appointments can be done for senior officials who have worked in 
		the department for at least 90 days and can last for up to 210 days, 
		spokesman George Hartmann said.
 
 As the minority party in the Senate, Democrats might need some 
		Republican support to have legal standing to sue Trump under the 
		Appointments Clause, said Andrew Wright, who was a White House lawyer 
		under former President Barack Obama.
 
 The source close to the Senate Judiciary Committee said Democrats were 
		unsure whether they would reach out to Republicans to join the lawsuit, 
		but added it was "not likely."
 
		
		 
		
 Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, who earlier this year introduced 
		legislation to protect Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who is conducting 
		the probe, said Whitaker did not pose a threat to his work.
 
 "Mueller will be allowed to do his job," Graham said in a Friday 
		interview on Fox News Radio.
 
 John Yoo, a former Justice Department lawyer in the George W. Bush 
		administration, said "the Supreme Court made clear that the Attorney 
		General is a principal officer" in a 1998 case.
 
		"Therefore, Whitaker cannot serve as acting Attorney General ... Any 
		other officer in the Justice Department who was appointed through advice 
		and consent can serve, including the Deputy AG, the solicitor general, 
		and the assistant AGs," said Yoo, now a law professor at the University 
		of California, Berkeley.
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			President Donald Trump talks to reporters prior to departing for 
			Paris, France from the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, 
			U.S., November 9, 2018. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo 
            
			 
            Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said Deputy Attorney General 
			Rod Rosenstein, a career Justice Department official already 
			confirmed by the Senate, should have been named the new attorney 
			general.
 RESTRICTIONS ON TRUMP
 
 U.S. intelligence agencies have said Russia interfered in the 2016 
			election in an attempt to tip it towards Trump and away from his 
			Democratic opponent, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
 
 Republican Senator Susan Collins said Mueller must be allowed to 
			complete his investigation into whether Trump's campaign colluded 
			with Moscow.
 
 Trump has repeatedly said there was no collusion, and has slammed 
			the probe as a "witch hunt." Russia has denied interfering.
 
 "I am concerned about comments that Acting Attorney General Matthew 
			Whitaker has made regarding the Special Counsel and the parameters 
			of his investigation," Collins said in a statement.
 
            
			 
            
 "We should bring to the Senate floor legislation that would put 
			restrictions on the ability of President Donald Trump to fire the 
			Special Counsel."
 
 Speaking to reporters at the White House before he left on a trip to 
			Paris, Trump defended his choice of Whitaker, saying the former U.S. 
			attorney for the southern district of Iowa had an excellent 
			reputation and came highly recommended by former Iowa Governor Terry 
			Branstad, who is now Trump's ambassador to China.
 
 In a late night Tweet on Friday, Trump reiterated that he did not 
			know Whitaker, but that he was very highly thought of by Iowa 
			senators Joni Ernst and Chuck Grassley and Branstad.
 
 "I feel certain he will make an outstanding Acting Attorney 
			General!," Trump said.
 
 Trump said on Friday he had not discussed the Mueller probe with 
			Whitaker before appointing him.
 
 A spokeswoman for the Justice Department has said Whitaker would 
			oversee all matters under its jurisdiction, including the Mueller 
			investigation. Democrats have called on Whitaker to recuse himself.
 
 (Reporting by David Morgan and Jonathan Landay in Washington; 
			Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton, Jan Wolfe, Susan Cornwell, 
			Amanda Becker and Susan Heavey; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh, Paul 
			Simao, Sonya Hepinstall and Nick Macfie)
 
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