Senate confirms William Barr as U.S.
attorney general
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[February 15, 2019]
By Sarah N. Lynch and Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate
confirmed William Barr as attorney general on Thursday, installing a
seasoned lawyer with decades of Washington experience to head the
Justice Department and putting him in charge of overseeing Special
Counsel Robert Mueller's long-running probe of whether President Donald
Trump's 2016 campaign colluded with Russia.
The Senate voted 54 to 45, largely along party lines. A Justice
Department spokeswoman said Barr will be sworn in at 4:45 PM ET in the
Oval Office of the White House by Chief Justice John Roberts.
Many Democrats opposed Barr out of concern he might not make Mueller's
findings fully public. But the Senate is controlled by Trump's fellow
Republicans, so Barr's confirmation was virtually assured.
“Today is a great day for the Department of Justice with the
confirmation of William Barr to be the next Attorney General," said
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham.
“He is a steady hand at a time of turmoil and he will bring much-needed
reform to the Department of Justice."
Previously attorney general from 1991 to 1993 under President George H.W.
Bush, Barr has won praise from lawmakers in both parties for his
expertise and grasp of the workings of the Justice Department.
He would be the third man in barely two years to occupy that post,
replacing acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker, who replaced
Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Trump ousted Sessions last November
after criticizing him repeatedly.
Mueller is investigating meddling by Russia in the 2016 U.S.
presidential election and whether Moscow colluded with Trump's campaign
to try to tilt the election in Trump's favor, as well as possible
obstruction of justice.
Trump denies any collusion. The Kremlin denies any meddling.
Before being nominated, Barr wrote a 19-page legal memo, in which he
called part of Mueller's probe into whether the president obstructed
justice "fatally flawed." He shared it with Trump's legal team and
Justice Department officials.
Barr has said he will not let himself be bullied by Trump and will
protect the integrity of Mueller's investigation and make public as many
of its findings as he can.
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William Barr smiles during a break in his Senate Judiciary Committee
hearing on his nomination to be attorney general of the United
States on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., January 15, 2019.
REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/File Photo
Barr has not promised to release Mueller's report in its entirety.
He has warned he may not be allowed to reveal the identities of
people who escape prosecution. That stance troubles many Democrats,
who say Barr's expansive views of executive power might lead him to
suppress parts of the report.
“The Justice Department needs a leader who will be independent of
the White House and who is able to stand up to President Trump,"
said Senator Dianne Feinstein, the top Democrat on the Senate
Judiciary Committee, in a statement.
"Bill Barr hasn’t demonstrated that he would be that independent
leader."
Despite Democrats' opposition, many were anxious to have Barr
installed quickly so he would replace Whitaker, whose tenure has
been fraught with controversy since Trump appointed him in November.
Critics have alleged Whitaker's appointment was unlawful. Democrats
fear Trump installed Whitaker to undermine Mueller's probe because
Whitaker had criticized it when he was a conservative pundit.
Barr is widely expected to back many of Trump's tough immigration
policies. He will also be under the microscope for how he implements
a new law that eases prison sentences for non-violent criminals,
after he advocated for the opposite, tough-on-crime approach for
decades.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch, Andy Sullivan and Lisa Lambert in
Washington; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh, Dan Grebler and James
Dalgleish)
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