Leahy: White House Delays
Sending Key
Department Of Justice
Nominations
[WASHINGTON
(Tuesday, Dec. 4, 2007) – Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman
Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) Tuesday exposed the White House for
stalling key nominations for vacancies in the Department of
Justice. The Administration Nov. 15 announced it intended to
send nominations to Capitol Hill for the Deputy Attorney
General, the Associate Attorney General, and the Assistant
Attorney General for the Civil Division. Almost three weeks
later, the Senate has not received the nominations.]
Statement of
Senator Patrick Leahy,
Chairman, Senate
Judiciary Committee
White House Delays On Executive Branch Vacancies
December 4, 2007
It is December and there are few
legislative days left to us before the Christmas holidays and
the end of this session. I had hoped and planned to devote the
energy and attention of the Judiciary Committee to working with
the Administration to fill the remaining high-level vacancies at
the Department of Justice by reviewing the nominations, holding
the needed hearings and making significant progress.
Indeed, while we were preparing in
October for the confirmation hearing on the Mukasey nomination
to be Attorney General, I urged the President and others to work
with us to make progress. We proceeded to prepare for and hold
a significant hearing on the Mukasey nomination in which many
important issues were raised. The Committee then proceeded to
consider the nomination and, given concerns about the nominee’s
answers to certain key questions, a number of Senators who had
hoped to be able to support the nomination were not able to do
so. We nevertheless proceeded and the nomination was reported
to the floor. It was scheduled for debate by the Leader,
expeditiously debated, and soon after confirmed.
Over the course of this year the
Judiciary Committee’s investigation into the firing of United
States Attorneys and into the influence of White House political
operatives on federal law enforcement resulted in the
resignations of the leadership of the Justice Department,
including the Attorney General, the Deputy Attorney General, the
Associate Attorney General, the chiefs of staff of the Attorney
General and Deputy Attorney General, the White House liaison,
and many others. There have also been a number of White House
resignations, including that of Karl Rove and his deputies Sara
Taylor and Scott Jennings.
As I met with Michael Mukasey in
preparation for his hearing and in our conservations since his
swearing in, I have emphasized the need to fill the remaining
vacancies with nominees who will restore the independence of
federal law enforcement. For months I have been talking
publicly and privately as well about the need to name U.S.
Attorneys around the country, where more than a quarter of those
positions are not Senate-confirmed appointments.
With great fanfare, in the days
before the congressional Thanksgiving recess, the White House
made a show of releasing the names of a score of nominees. That
“announcement” was mostly bluster. So, for example, today --
more than two and a half weeks after the grand announcements --
Mark R. Filip has not been nominated to be the Deputy Attorney
General, Kevin O’Connor has not been nominated to be the
Associate Attorney General, and Gregory Katsas has not been
nominated to be the Assistant Attorney General in charge of the
Civil Division at the Department of Justice. Nor have we
received their questionnaires, their FBI background information
or their ethics reports.
Indeed, we only this week received
the questionnaires for the President’s nominations to head the
important Civil Rights Division and the Tax Division at the
Department of Justice, more than two weeks after those
nominations were announced.
Further, with respect to United
States Attorneys and United States Marshals vacancies, we have
not seen the cooperation or expedition that I would have liked.
We finally received the questionnaires and FBI background
information on three U.S. Attorney nominees just yesterday. I
have asked Committee staff to review these matters quickly and
will ask Senators to consider the nominations of Diane J.
Humetewa to be U.S. Attorney for the District of Arizona,
Gregory Brower to be the U.S. Attorney for the District of
Nevada, and Edmund Booth to be U.S. Attorney for the Southern
District of Georgia as promptly as possible and, if possible, as
soon as this Thursday morning. I note that Ms. Humetewa and Mr.
Brower are being named as replacements for two of the
outstanding U.S. Attorneys who were fired on December 7 last
year as part of the ill-advised partisan plan that, when we
investigated, led to the resignations of Attorney General
Gonzales and so many others who were involved. Paul Charlton and
Daniel Bodgen should not have been fired and are stilled owed an
explanation and apology by this Administration.
I will make progress when I can.
I had hoped to hold a confirmation hearing on the nomination of
Mark Filip to be the Deputy Attorney General, the second-highest
official at the Justice Department, as soon as next Wednesday.
I felt I could only proceed to do so if we received the
paperwork and the nomination by yesterday in order to allow
Senators an opportunity to prepare for the hearing on an
expedited basis. Without those materials it would be
ill-advised and far too rushed to proceed next week. Depending
on when we receive the overdue materials, we may still be able
to hold a hearing before this session ends, but time is
fleeting.
This Administration has known
since at least May 14, 2007, when the former Deputy Attorney
General Paul McNulty announced that he was resigning, that there
was to be a vacancy in this important position. Yet even after
he proceeded to resign, there was no one named. That was more
than four months ago.
When the Administration prevailed
upon Craig Morford to serve as the Acting Deputy Attorney
General, I wrote to the White House counsel to ask whether Mr.
Morford would transition from being named the acting to being
the President’s nominee. That was back in July. I was trying
back then to move forward and to put effective leadership in
place. For my efforts, I was essentially told to mind my own
business and that they would tell me who would be the new Deputy
Attorney General when they decided who would be nominated to be
the next Deputy Attorney General. I thank Mr. Morford for his
service, for his willingness to answer the call when the
Department was in complete disarray and for the personal
sacrifices he has been called upon to make by being separated
from his family for months and months.
By not providing the nominations
to the highest-ranking vacancies within the Justice Department
and not providing the basic background materials needed to
review such nominations before the Thanksgiving recess, the
Administration has once again foreclosed the opportunity to have
these nominees considered by the Senate and in place this year.
They will now necessarily carry over into the next session.
That is unfortunate and unnecessary.