Mueller report looming, new attorney general in hot seat
WASHINGTON — William Barr has been attorney general for just one week but is on the cusp of staring down what will almost certainly be the most consequential decision of his long career: how much of the special counsel’s findings to make public.
The position catapults him from Justice Department outsider free to theorize and speculate on special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation to the man at the centre of the legal and political firestorm that will accompany its looming conclusion.
With Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein preparing to exit after supervising the day-to-day investigation for nearly two years, and with Trump loyalist Matthew Whitaker now replaced in the top job, Barr is in the hot seat: He is responsible for navigating the department through congressional and public demands for details of Mueller’s findings while dealing with a White House that may challenge, or even stifle, the conclusions.
Barr is already facing pressure from House Democrats who say they might subpoena Mueller’s findings if they are not fully released. Six House Democratic committee chairmen wrote Barr on Friday and demanded that he make Mueller’s report public, including any “evidence of misconduct” by President Donald Trump.