Gaetz Withdraws as Attorney General Pick
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2024/11/21/us/trump-gaetz-news
Where Things
Stand
Matt Gaetz,
the former representative whom President-elect Donald J. Trump wanted as his
attorney general, has withdrawn from consideration. Sexual misconduct
allegations against Mr. Gaetz had drawn much scrutiny, including from senators
who would vote to approve him for the position. Read more ›
Vice
President-elect JD Vance had urged Senate Republicans to support Mr. Gaetz in
meetings in the Capitol on Wednesday. Republicans on the House Ethics Committee
voted against releasing the panel’s report into sexual misconduct and illicit
drug use allegations against Mr. Gaetz. Read more ›
Mr. Vance is
accompanying another administration nominee to meetings on Capitol Hill on
Thursday: Pete Hegseth, the candidate for defense secretary. Mr. Hegseth is
also facing sexual misconduct allegations, stemming from a 2017 encounter he
asserted was consensual. Read more ›
Nov. 21,
2024, 1:30 p.m. ET28 minutes ago
Peter
BakerMaggie Haberman and Jonathan SwanReporting from Washington
Gaetz’s
withdrawal follows revelations in a sex-trafficking inquiry.
Matt Gaetz,
who faced a torrent of scrutiny over allegations of sex trafficking and drug
use, abruptly withdrew his bid to become attorney general on Thursday in the
first major political setback for President-elect Donald J. Trump since his
election this month.
Mr. Gaetz
has consistently denied the allegations, but his prospective nomination ran
into trouble in the Senate, where Republicans were deeply reluctant to confirm
someone to run the same Justice Department that once investigated him for
allegations of sex trafficking an underage girl even though no charges were
brought.
In
announcing his withdrawal a day after visiting the Senate, Mr. Gaetz insisted
that he had strong support among fellow Republicans. But two people with direct
knowledge of Mr. Gaetz’s thinking said he made the decision to pull out after
concluding that he would not have the votes in the Senate for confirmation. The
people asked for anonymity to discuss his private decision-making.
“While the
momentum was strong, it is clear that my confirmation was unfairly becoming a
distraction to the critical work of the Trump/Vance Transition,” Mr. Gaetz
wrote on social media. “There is no time to waste on a needlessly protracted
Washington scuffle, thus I’ll be withdrawing my name from consideration to
serve as Attorney General. Trump’s DOJ must be in place and ready on Day 1.”
He added, “I
remain fully committed to see that Donald J. Trump is the most successful
President in history. I will forever be honored that President Trump nominated
me to lead the Department of Justice and I’m certain he will Save America.”
Mr. Trump
responded with his own social media post expressing appreciation for Mr. Gaetz.
“Matt has a wonderful future, and I look forward to watching all of the great
things he will do,” the president-elect wrote. Mr. Trump did not indicate who
he might select as attorney general instead.
The collapse
of Mr. Gaetz’s selection underscored the haphazard way that Mr. Trump has gone
about assembling his new administration. He picked Mr. Gaetz almost on a whim
last week without extensive vetting, knowing that allegations were out there,
but essentially daring Senate Republicans to accept him anyway.
What
remained unclear on Thursday was whether Mr. Gaetz’s withdrawal will embolden
Senate Republicans to challenge other contentious cabinet choices, such as Pete
Hegseth, the Fox News host tapped for defense secretary, or Robert F. Kennedy
Jr., the conspiracy theorist and vaccine skeptic selected for secretary of
health and human services. Mr. Hegseth has been accused of sexual assault, but
denies it, while Mr. Kennedy has been accused of groping a family babysitter,
which he has said he does not remember doing.
The storm
surrounding Mr. Gaetz had drawn attention away from some of the other contested
picks. Mr. Gaetz, who represented Florida in the House until being tapped by
Mr. Trump, had been one of the most unpopular Republicans in the Capitol,
particularly after instigating the far-right revolt that toppled Speaker Kevin
McCarthy.
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