Trump
Says He Will Nominate Kash Patel to Run F.B.I.
President-elect
Donald J. Trump turned to a firebrand loyalist to become director of the
bureau, which he sees as part of a ‘deep state’ conspiracy against him.
By Devlin
Barrett and Maggie Haberman
Reporting
from Washington
Nov. 30,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/30/us/politics/trump-replace-christopher-wray.html
President-elect
Donald J. Trump said on Saturday that he wants to replace Christopher A. Wray,
the F.B.I. director, with Kash Patel, a hard-line critic of the bureau who has
called for shutting down the agency’s Washington headquarters, firing its
leadership and bringing the nation’s law enforcement agencies “to heel.”
Mr. Trump’s
planned nomination of Mr. Patel has echoes of his failed attempt to place
another partisan firebrand, Matt Gaetz, atop the Justice Department as attorney
general. It could run into hurdles in the Senate, which will be called on to
confirm him, and is sure to send shock waves through the F.B.I., which Mr.
Trump and his allies have come to view as part of a “deep state” conspiracy
against him.
Mr. Patel
has been closely aligned with Mr. Trump’s belief that much of the nation’s law
enforcement and national security establishment needs to be purged of bias and
held accountable for what they see as unjustified investigations and
prosecutions of Mr. Trump and his allies.
Mr. Patel
“played a pivotal role in uncovering the Russia, Russia, Russia Hoax, standing
as an advocate for truth, accountability and the Constitution,” Mr. Trump said
in announcing his choice in a social media post.
He called
Mr. Patel “a brilliant lawyer, investigator and ‘America First’ fighter who has
spent his career exposing corruption, defending Justice, and protecting the
American people.”
Mr. Patel, a
favorite of Mr. Trump’s political base, has worked as a federal prosecutor and
a public defender, but has little of the law enforcement and management
experience typical of F.B.I. directors.
He served in
a series of administration positions at the tail end of Mr. Trump’s first term,
including posts on the National Security Council and in the Pentagon. Before
leaving office in early 2021, Mr. Trump floated the idea of making Mr. Patel
deputy director of either the C.I.A. or the F.B.I. William P. Barr, the
attorney general at the time, wrote in his memoir that Mr. Patel would have
become deputy F.B.I. director only “over my dead body.”
The
announcement also underscores Mr. Trump’s intense dislike of Mr. Wray, the
current director, whose 10-year term does not expire until 2027. Mr. Trump
appointed Mr. Wray to the job but soured on him within months, complaining to
friends and allies that Mr. Wray was not running the agency the way he wanted.
Shortly
after Mr. Trump lost the 2020 election, he called Mr. Wray and said that he was
not going to fire him, even as he moved to dismiss other high-profile
officials, like his defense secretary, Mark T. Esper.
But Mr.
Trump, whose fury with the F.B.I. deepened after the agency executed a search
warrant in August 2022 at his Florida club and home, Mar-a-Lago, in search of
classified documents, suggested earlier this year that Mr. Wray resign. In
declaring well before being sworn into office that he wants a new director, Mr.
Trump was pushing Mr. Wray to resign before he is fired.
“This is
firing the F.B.I. director,” said one law enforcement official, speaking on
condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter.
“It is
extremely dangerous to have a change in an F.B.I. director just after a change
in administration,” the official said, referring to the longstanding policy of
keeping the cycle for appointments of a director separate from the presidential
election cycle and partisan politics.
A statement
released by the bureau following Mr. Trump’s announcement did not address
whether Mr. Wray would step aside.
“Every day,
the men and women of the F.B.I. continue to work to protect Americans from a
growing array of threats,” the statement said. “Director Wray’s focus remains
on the men and women of the F.B.I., the people we do the work with and the
people we do the work for.”
While a
number of Mr. Trump’s allies expected him to announce a replacement for Mr.
Wray, many did not believe he would ultimately select Mr. Patel, whose
confirmation process before the Senate could be rigorous. Mr. Trump had at one
point considered making Andrew Bailey, the Missouri attorney general, the
F.B.I. director, according to two people briefed on the matter.
Natalie
Bara, president of the F.B.I. Agents Association, did not directly address Mr.
Trump’s selection of Mr. Patel, but said the group “is committed to preserving
the bureau’s independence and effectiveness in protecting the American people
and upholding the Constitution.”
Strong
leadership, she said, “is critical to maintaining the integrity and mission of
the F.B.I.,” and that agents’ commitment to upholding the law and protecting
Americans “does not waver when there are changes in a presidential
administration or if the leadership in the bureau changes.”
Current and
former law enforcement officials have worried that a second Trump term would
feature an assault on the independence and authority of the F.B.I. and the
Justice Department, and for many of them, Mr. Patel’s ascension to the
director’s role would confirm the worst of those fears.
Mr. Patel
laid out his vision for wreaking vengeance on the F.B.I. and Justice Department
in a book, “Government Gangsters,” calling for clearing out the top ranks of
the bureau, which he called “a threat to the people.” He also wrote a
children’s book, “The Plot Against the King,” telling through fantasy the story
of the investigations into Mr. Trump’s 2016 campaign’s possible ties to
Russians.
He has vowed
to investigate and possibly prosecute journalists once he is back in
government, adding that he would “follow the facts and the law.”
“Yes, we’re
going to come after the people in the media who lied about American citizens,
who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections — we’re going to come after
you,” he said last year. “Whether it’s criminally or civilly, we’ll figure that
out.”
In planning
to remove Mr. Wray from atop the nation’s premier law enforcement agency, Mr.
Trump would be echoing one of the most defining acts of his first term, his
dismissal of James B. Comey as F.B.I. director as investigations of Trump
associates began to heat up.
That act led
to the appointment of the special counsel Robert S. Mueller III, who spent
nearly two years examining the Trump campaign’s possible ties to Russia.
While Mr.
Trump was out of office, Mr. Patel became enmeshed in one of the federal
prosecutions of Mr. Trump directed by Jack Smith, the special counsel. He was
called to testify before the grand jury hearing evidence about Mr. Trump’s
possession of highly classified documents after leaving office, according to
people familiar with the investigation who spoke on condition of anonymity to
describe a secret proceeding.
Mr. Patel’s
testimony was sought to help prosecutors understand what defense, if any, Mr.
Trump and his associates could offer that the former president might have
declassified some of the material.
Maggie
Haberman is a senior political correspondent reporting on the 2024 presidential
campaign, down ballot races across the country and the investigations into
former President Donald J. Trump. More about Maggie Haberman
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário