Trump's AG Pick Has Argued Presidents Have Robust Powers

Erick Tucker READ TIME: 1 MIN.

President Donald Trump's nominee for attorney general once advised that a president didn't need Congress' permission to attack Iraq. William Barr also said the U.S. could arrest a foreign dictator and capture suspects abroad without that country's permission.

That expansive view of presidential power is unsettling for Democrats as the Senate holds a confirmation hearing next week for Barr, who served as AG for President George H.W. Bush.

Democrats fear Barr would be overly deferential to Trump in a position where legal decisions aren't supposed to be guided by political considerations.

Of particular concern to Democrats is a memo Barr wrote last year criticizing part of the special counsel's Russia investigation.

Barr's friends defend his opinions as carefully reasoned and say he wouldn't be a pushover for Trump.


by Erick Tucker

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