Senate Democrats on Tuesday delayed the
confirmation of Alabama Sen. Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III to be the next
attorney general of the United States, just hours after President Donald Trump
fired the acting attorney general for defying his administration.
The Senate Judiciary Committee was
expected to advance Sessions’ nomination to the full Senate on Tuesday. But
Democrats on the committee, starting at 9:30 a.m., spoke at length about their
opposition to Sessions and their admiration for former acting Attorney General
Sally Yates, who was fired by Trump late Monday night. The committee vote on
Sessions will now be held Wednesday.
Yates sent a memo to Justice Department
employees on Monday instructing them not to defend Trump’s executive order on
immigration from Friday. Yates said she was “not convinced” the order was
lawful, though she noted that DOJ’s Office of Legal Counsel had cleared the
language of the order as properly drafted.
Hours later, Trump fired her. Yates was
cleaning out her office at Justice Department headquarters late into the
evening. Dana Boente ― a career lawyer who had served as the top federal
prosecutor in the Eastern District of Virginia ― was sworn in late Monday. He
immediately rescinded Yates’ memo.
At the hearing on Tuesday, Sen. Dianne
Feinstein (D-Calif.) said Yates showed what an independent attorney general
does. “That statement took guts. That statement said what an independent
attorney general should do. That statement took a steel spine,” Feinstein said.
“I have no confidence that Sen. Sessions will do that.”
“He is the wrong person for this job,”
said Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.). He said that given what happened Monday night, the
vote was “a constitutional moment.”
Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) said
Yates’ letter was in the “highest traditions of the Department of Justice.” He
said he wasn’t sure Sessions would stand up to the president, as Yates had.
The message that Trump’s firing of
Yates sent to Justice Department employees, Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.) said, was
“check your independent judgment at the door, and get in line.”
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) allowed
Democrats as much time as they desired to voice their opposition to Sessions,
even as it meant delaying the vote to advance his confirmation by a day.
Former Attorney General Loretta Lynch,
who served until the end of the Obama administration, also praised Yates’ move
on Tuesday.
“With her decision not to defend the executive
order regarding immigration, Sally Yates displayed the fierce intellect,
unshakeable integrity, and deep commitment to the rule of law that have
characterized her 27 years of distinguished service to the Department of
Justice under both Democratic and Republican administrations,” Lynch said in a
statement.
“Her courageous leadership embodies the
highest traditions of the Department of Justice, whose first duty is always to
the American people, and to the Constitution that protects our rights and
safeguards our liberties,” Lynch said.
Yates declined an interview request
relayed to her as she was packing up her office on Monday night, and a former
aide who was assisting her with media requests said she would not be giving any
interviews on Tuesday.
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