Trump says he'll nominate Kash Patel as FBI director to remake the
agency. Here's what happens next
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[December 02, 2024]
By ERIC TUCKER
WASHINGTON (AP) — President-elect Donald Trump’s stunning announcement
that he will nominate Kash Patel as FBI director sets the stage for a
fresh round of turbulence at a law enforcement agency tasked with
protecting the homeland and investigating federal crimes.
Patel, a steadfast Trump ally with plans to shake up the bureau, is a
study in contrasts from the current tight-lipped director, Christopher
Wray, who preaches a “keep calm and tackle hard” mantra.
In selecting Patel late Saturday over more conventional contenders, the
incoming Republican president is again testing the loyalty of Senate
Republicans and their willingness to defy him.
Here's a look at what happens next:
What happens to the current FBI director?
Wray was appointed director by Trump in 2017 and technically has three
years left on his 10-year tenure.
That length of time is meant to ensure that directors of the nation’s
most prominent federal law enforcement agency can operate free from
political influence or pressure. Presidents have typically but not
always retained the director who was in place at the time they took
office, as Democratic President Joe Biden has done with Wray.
But it’s also the case that all FBI directors serve at the pleasure of
the president; indeed, Wray was nominated after Trump fired James Comey,
the FBI chief he inherited in his first term.
Biden's national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, said Sunday that the
Biden administration “adhered to the long-standing norm that FBI
directors serve out their full terms because the FBI director is a
unique player in the American government system.”
Noting that Trump had named Wray to the job, Sullivan told NBC's “Meet
the Press” that “Joe Biden didn’t fire him. He relied upon him to
execute his responsibilities as the director of the FBI and allowed him
to serve out the fullness of his term. ... So that’s how we approached
things and we would like to ensure that the FBI remains an independent
institution insulated from politics.”
Trump's announcement means that Wray can either resign from the job,
consistent with Trump’s apparent wishes, or wait to be fired once Trump
takes office in January. Either way, the selection of a successor is a
clear indication that Wray’s days are numbered.
The bureau, in a statement Saturday night, said, "Every day, the men and
women of the FBI continue to work to protect Americans from a growing
array of threats. Director Wray’s focus remains on the men and women of
the FBI, the people we do the work with, and the people we do the work
for.”
Can Patel be confirmed by the Senate?
Republicans may have won control of the Senate, but his confirmation is
not assured.
There are no doubt lawmakers who support Trump’s desire for a radically
overhauled FBI, particularly following federal investigations that
resulted in two separate indictments against the president-elect, and
who share his sentiment that federal law enforcement has been
“weaponized” against conservatives.
Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, in line to be the Senate Judiciary
Committee chairman when Republicans take control in January, said in a
post on X that Wray “has failed at fundamental duties” and that it was
time to “chart a new course 4 TRANSPARENCY +ACCOUNTABILITY at FBI.”
But, he added, Patel “must prove to Congress he will reform & restore
public trust in FBI."
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Kash Patel, former chief of staff to Acting Secretary of Defense
Christopher Miller, speaks at a rally in Minden, Nev., Oct. 8, 2022.
(AP Photo/José Luis Villegas, File)
Patel is likely to face deep skepticism during his confirmation
hearings over his stated plans to rid the government of
“conspirators” against Trump, and his claims that he would shut down
the FBI’s Pennsylvania Avenue headquarters in the nation's capital
and send the thousands of employees who work there to “chase down
criminals” across the country.
And while Trump may have wanted a loyalist willing to pursue
retribution against his perceived adversaries, that perspective is
likely to give pause to senators who believe that the FBI and
Justice Department should operate free of political influence and
not be tasked with carrying out a president’s personal agenda.
Foreshadowing the potentially bruising confirmation fight ahead,
Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, who is expected to the the ranking
Democrat next year on the Judiciary Committee, called Patel “an
unqualified loyalist” and said in a statement that “the Senate
should reject this unprecedented effort to weaponize the FBI for the
campaign of retribution that Donald Trump has promised.”
Trump has also raised the prospect of using recess appointments to
push his nominees through the Senate.
If Patel is confirmed, can he actually do what he’s said he’ll
do?
Patel has made a series of brash claims about his plans for the
federal government, but most of those proposals would require
backing and buy-in from other officials and would almost certainly
encounter significant resistance.
His desire, for instance, to reduce the FBI’s footprint and scale
back its authority stands in contrast to the tack traditionally
taken by leaders of the bureau, who invariably say they want more
resources — not less.
He’s mused about trying to rid the government of “conspirators”
against Trump and of going “after the people in the media who lied
about American citizens who helped Joe Biden rig presidential
elections,” whether criminally or civilly.
Under the FBI’s own guidelines, criminal investigations can’t be
rooted in arbitrary or groundless speculation but instead must have
an authorized purpose to detect or interrupt criminal activity. And
while the FBI conducts investigations, the responsibility of filing
federal charges, or bringing a lawsuit on behalf of the federal
government, falls to the Justice Department. Trump said earlier this
month that he intended to nominate former Florida attorney general
Pam Bondi to serve as attorney general.
Patel proposed crackdown on leaks of information by government
officials to the media is an indication that he would want the
Justice Department to reverse its current policy generally
prohibiting the seizure of reporters’ phone records in leak
investigations. That policy was implemented by Attorney General
Merrick Garland following an uproar over the revelation that federal
prosecutors had secretly obtained subpoenas for journalists’ phone
records.
Patel has also talked about disentangling the FBI’s
intelligence-gathering activities — now a core function of the
bureau’s mandate — from the rest of its law enforcement operations.
It’s unclear whether he intends to carry through on that pledge or
how it would be greeted at a time when the U.S. is facing what
officials say is a heightened threat of terrorism.
And he's said he thinks the FBI’s storied Pennsylvania Avenue
headquarters should be shut down, with the employees who work there
dispatched around the country to fight crime. It’s not clear if
that’s a hyperbolic claim simply reflecting disdain for the “deep
state” or something he’d actually try to implement.
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