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A legal expert for Fox News says that the appointment of Whitaker to be AG is not constitutional. That he does not meet the legal requirements and has not been approved by the Senate. So if his appointment is found to be unconstitutional as suggested by the legal expert from Fox News, what happens to any actions he takes?
Got any links or quotes on that?A legal expert for Fox News says that the appointment of Whitaker to be AG is not constitutional. That he does not meet the legal requirements and has not been approved by the Senate. So if his appointment is found to be unconstitutional as suggested by the legal expert from Fox News, what happens to any actions he takes?
A legal expert for Fox News says that the appointment of Whitaker to be AG is not constitutional. That he does not meet the legal requirements and has not been approved by the Senate. So if his appointment is found to be unconstitutional as suggested by the legal expert from Fox News, what happens to any actions he takes?
Got any links or quotes on that?
“Let your fingers do the walking.”
https://www.axios.com/trump-acting-...ges-a9199197-9817-42b4-8df2-95f92cabc861.html
A legal expert for Fox News says that the appointment of Whitaker to be AG is not constitutional. That he does not meet the legal requirements and has not been approved by the Senate. So if his appointment is found to be unconstitutional as suggested by the legal expert from Fox News, what happens to any actions he takes?
A legal expert for Fox News says that the appointment of Whitaker to be AG is not constitutional. That he does not meet the legal requirements and has not been approved by the Senate. So if his appointment is found to be unconstitutional as suggested by the legal expert from Fox News, what happens to any actions he takes?
He can only work there temporarily. He can act as the appointment for up to 210 days before someone who is approved by the senate has to take control.
Unless Trump fires him and then hires another "temporary" AG... or even same one as "new" one... right?
Trump is the embodiment why this country needs more laws and regulations...
Unless Trump fires him and then hires another "temporary" AG... or even same one as "new" one... right?
Trump is the embodiment why this country needs more laws and regulations...
A legal expert for Fox News says that the appointment of Whitaker to be AG is not constitutional. That he does not meet the legal requirements and has not been approved by the Senate. So if his appointment is found to be unconstitutional as suggested by the legal expert from Fox News, what happens to any actions he takes?
What "legal requirements"?
What’s Trump’s authority for superseding the AG Succession statute? He’s undoubtedly invoking the Vacancies Reform Act of 1998 (VRA), which provides (5 U.S.C. § 3345(a)(3)) that the President “may direct an officer or employee of [an] Executive agency to perform the functions and duties of [a] vacant office,” provided that the officer or employee has served, for at least 90 days during the year before the vacancy, in a position for which the pay is at least the level of GS-15—a criterion that Matthew Whitaker satisfies.
The Department of Justice’s formal view is that the VRA provides the President with an alternative authority, in addition to the AG Succession Act, to designate who shall perform the AG’s functions and duties during a vacancy in the office. Thus, for example, when AG Alberto Gonzales resigned in 2007, President George W. Bush named the Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Division, Peter Keisler, to be the Acting Attorney General, when the AG Succession Order in effect at the time, issued pursuant to the AG Succession Act, would have assigned those functions to the Solicitor General, then Paul Clement.
The Assistant AG for the Civil Division is a position approved by the Senate. So that example does not wash. Keisler was already Senate approved.
The issue of merit is who would have Standing before the Court. It was not hard to find somebody with Standing before the Court in Watergate. Here we have a Special Counsel, not an Independent Counsel. So legal beagles have to be working to find somebody with Standing before the Court. The arguments would be the Principle Roles requirement in the Constitution v the VRA.
IMO the case would hinge on whether the Administration could prove that it had good reason to use the VRA and avoid the Principle Roles requirement. That would be a hard one to prove. Whitaker is an utter buffoon. In fact the very reason Rosenstein has likely not been dealt with is because Noel Franscisco would be overwhelmed immediately by Rosenstein's work load and Whitaker is a veritable idiot. There is nobody left over there. So Whitaker has problems of competence and problems of Conflict of Interest and predisposition on the case just based on his public statements AND he does not have Senate approval. "My kid is about to be Indicted" is not justification for overriding the Principle Roles requirement.
IMO if the news tonight that Justice Ethics Officer has already weighed in and has recommended that Whitaker recuse himself, if there was any doubt at the Court, that recommendation from Justice Ethics would push it over the finish line and Whitaker would be through.
That brings me back to having to find somebody with Standing before the Court to bring the case. But the Administration would not have the stronger case.
Trump of course only picks people based on complete tunnel vision loyalty to him which invariably draws him into these circumstances having chosen utter buffoons for jobs that require a brain.
Nonsense. The assistant USAG is named by the AG..the Senate has no voice it, so it "does wash".. Regardless the POTUS is not required to named the asst.AG as successor, or even acting USAG.
Can't read?
which provides (5 U.S.C. § 3345(a)(3)) that the President “may direct an officer or employee of [an] Executive agency to perform the functions and duties of [a] vacant office,” provided that the officer or employee has served, for at least 90 days during the year before the vacancy, in a position for which the pay is at least the level of GS-15—a criterion that Matthew Whitaker satisfies.
Wrong.... Assistant AG's are Senate approved. As such your example does not wash.
If somebody with standing before the Court can be identified, this ends up in Court and the Administration does not have the stronger case.
Believe whatever bull**** you want to makeup..I CITED THE ACTUAL LAW.
It does not matter what you cited. Is there a Principle Roles Requirement in the Constitution? Yes. Is the Principle Roles Requirement mentioned in the statute? NO.
This one is headed to Court IF somebody with Standard before the Court can be identified. Almost laughable that we let the Independent Counsel Statute sunset just after using it AGAIN. "Gee we don't need that any longer". IDIOTS....raving idiots running the country.
There is no such requirement for an ACTING USAG. But feel free to makeup whatever bull**** you need to believe. If after (or before) 210 days, the President wishes to have Whitaker (or anyone else) named as USAG, it will require Senate approval.
That IS NOT THIS. Get a clue.
I thought you said FOX. Just because there's an 'x' in there name doesn't mean they are the same.“Let your fingers do the walking.”
https://www.axios.com/trump-acting-...ges-a9199197-9817-42b4-8df2-95f92cabc861.html
2. The Federal Vacancies Reform Act of 1998 allows the president to choose any senior DOJ official to serve as an acting attorney general as long as that person has already served in a high-level position for 90 days. Whitaker qualifies for the temporary position under this Act.
There have been arguments on both sides over whether the act supplants the AG succession law, John Bies, former deputy assistant attorney general in the office of legal counsel, told Axios.
"I think it’s pretty clear under the terms of the statute itself that [Trump] has authority ... to appoint someone who is a senior DOJ official," he said.
"The Vacancy Act has precedence [over the Succession Act] when the president picks someone under that procedure," another DOJ lawyer texted us.
Reports state that the “acting appointment” works for seven months. Much can happen in seven months, both in litigation and the Mueller probe.....
Actually from what I just heard, that for the principle position, and the AG is one, even for a Temp they have to have been confirmed by the Senate for some position. They can be from any other principle position that has been confirmed by the Senate, but they have had to be confirmed by the Senate for a position even to hold the position of AG as a temp.
Didn’t catch “FOX” in your request, see post 24, sorry for the confusion......I thought you said FOX. Just because there's an 'x' in there name doesn't mean they are the same.
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