After Attorney General Jeff Sessions stepped down yesterday at Donald Trump’s insistence, the Justice Department obviously needed an acting A.G. Under normal circumstances, the post would be temporarily filled by a deputy attorney general who’d have the relevant experience and the benefit of having been confirmed by the Senate.
As Rachel explained on the show last night, Trump chose a very different course.
With Jeff Sessions now out as attorney general, President Donald Trump’s choice to fill his shoes, at least temporarily, is in the position to have a significant impact on the scope of special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russia’s interference in the 2016 election.
Matthew Whitaker, who has served as Session’s chief of staff since late 2017, has been tapped to become acting attorney general and will therefore take over the role of overseeing Mueller’s probe from Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein.
The game of musical chairs at the DOJ may seem like bureaucratic trivia. It’s not. To fully appreciate the scope of the dilemma, it’s important to understand who Matt Whitaker is.
After serving as a U.S. Attorney during the Bush/Cheney era, Whitaker more recently was basically a professional pundit who appeared on television quite a bit — it’s probably how Trump came to learn of his work — where he was a frequent and harsh critic of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into the Russia scandal.
In fact, Whitaker went so far as to call the probe, in Trump-esque language, “Mueller’s lynch mob.”
In one especially memorable TV appearance, Whitaker described a scenario to CNN in which Sessions would be replaced, and his successor would reduce the special counsel’s office’s budget “so low that his investigation grinds to almost a halt.”
As of last night, Whitaker now oversees the Mueller investigation.
There are all kinds of reasons to be concerned about Whitaker’s qualifications and record. He is, after all, a shamelessly partisan loyalist, with a strange, far-right worldview, and with close ties to a witness who’s testified in the Russia scandal.
Incidentally, Whitaker also helped lead “an invention-promotion company that was shut down earlier this year amid a Federal Trade Commission investigation.”









