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riversedge

(80,727 posts)
Wed Mar 25, 2026, 11:23 AM 7 hrs ago

Trump just caved on one of his biggest power grabs



Trump just caved on one of his biggest power grabs


https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/trump-just-caved-on-one-of-his-biggest-power-grabs/ar-AA1ZlGgR?ocid=hpmsn&cvid=afd5ff229ca44af290c47c8a709b0e3f&cvpid=69c3fba4cd9346fca2fa255575da67d3&ei=18

Donald Trump’s Department of Justice quietly caved in one of its biggest brawls with the federal judiciary on Monday, conceding district courts’ authority to appoint U.S. attorneys after a series of stinging legal defeats. In a filing, the Justice Department accepted a court’s appointment of Robert Frazer as head of New Jersey’s U.S. attorney’s office, an abrupt reversal of its assertion that courts have no such power. Its capitulation ended an eight-month standoff during which New Jersey lacked a lawfully serving U.S. attorney after the DOJ refused to replace Alina Habba with a legitimate successor. This (entirely avoidable) leadership vacuum jeopardized myriad criminal indictments and unleashed a wave of chaos that culminated in a federal judge throwing one prosecutor out of his courtroom last week.


The practical consequences of the Justice Department’s surrender are immense. But the deeper implications for the Trump administration’s self-proclaimed “war” against judges are just as important. For the first time, it accepted the federal judiciary’s constitutional prerogative to appoint U.S. attorneys as prescribed by Congress, retreating from its earlier position that only the president can name top prosecutors. This white flag marks the Trump administration’s biggest step back from its maximalist vision of a “unitary executive” who holds total control over his entire branch. It is a begrudging admission that the other two branches of government can still restrain the presidency—proof that the separation of powers is more resilient than Trump had anticipated.

The Justice Department’s struggle to appoint U.S. attorneys stemmed from a mix of obstinance and incompetence. As a rule, these prosecutors are supposed to be nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate. Under federal law, though, Attorney General Pam Bondi may appoint interim U.S. attorneys who may serve for up to 120 days. If they have not yet been confirmed when their term expires, this law allows federal district courts to replace them with a new U.S. attorney who may serve indefinitely.


Of course, the Trump administration would not have to worry about this backstop if it had picked interim U.S. attorneys capable of Senate confirmation. But instead, it named unqualified partisans, like former Trump personal attorneys Lindsey Halligan and Alina Habba, who could be trusted to prosecute the president’s political opponents but stood no chance of Senate confirmation. When their terms expired, the DOJ concocted workarounds to try to keep Trump’s loyalists in office as “acting” U.S. attorneys—maneuvers that were rejected by courts in Virginia, New Jersey, New York, Nevada, California, and New Mexico.

With these offices vacant, the task fell upon district courts to name .............
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Trump just caved on one of his biggest power grabs (Original Post) riversedge 7 hrs ago OP
He caved because he lost the case - again! This is a win for the federal judge FakeNoose 6 hrs ago #1

FakeNoose

(41,519 posts)
1. He caved because he lost the case - again! This is a win for the federal judge
Wed Mar 25, 2026, 12:02 PM
6 hrs ago

... U.S. District Judge Zahid Quraishi who stuck by his previous ruling.

Thank you Judge Quraishi!

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