By any sensible measure, Ken Cuccinelli is a very poor choice to oversee the nation’s legal immigration system. As we recently discussed, the far-right Virginian — an intra-party critic of Trump’s before he changed his mind — has earned a reputation for radicalism on a wide range of issues, including immigration.
And yet, Donald Trump has nevertheless tapped Cuccinelli to serve as the acting director of the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.
DHS secretary Kevin McAleenan announced the move in an email to agency staff Monday, though the mechanics of whether it would include an official nomination were not immediately clear.
In any event, Cuccinelli, head of the Senate Conservatives Fund and a former Virginia attorney general, is expected to take over at least on an interim basis at USCIS, which is responsible for the administration of legal immigration, including dealing with asylum claims, issuing green cards and handling the naturalization process.
Ordinarily, this would be the point at which I start to write about the many reasons Cuccinelli is an awful choice, why he’s likely to fail, and how this ties into the larger pattern of the president choosing the wrong people for important posts after seeing them say nice things about him on television.
But as applicable as those points are, this story is a little different. In fact, what was especially notable about the Cuccinelli announcement yesterday was the degree to which it circumvented the law.
In practical terms, Donald Trump has a political problem: he wants Ken Cuccinelli to lead Citizenship and Immigration Services, but the president also knows that Senate Republican leaders hate Cuccinelli and almost certainly won’t confirm him to the powerful position.
Under normal circumstances, that would lead a normal White House to start looking for someone else. In 2019, however, it led Team Trump to look for a way to put Cuccinelli in the position anyway, personnel laws be damned. As Government Executive reported overnight:









