President
Clayton has been serving as the top federal prosecutor in Manhattan and was chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission during Trump’s first term.
“I encourage the United States Senate to confirm Jay as soon as possible,” Trump said on social media.
Clayton as US attorney for the Southern District of New York is heading the nation’s most prominent federal prosecutor’s office. Its jurisdiction includes Manhattan, making Clayton the de facto sheriff of Wall Street, with the office handling many of the most high-profile cases involving the financial industry.
Senate Majority Leader
“My assumption is, at least, that if we can get the nomination of the paperwork here, we can move fairly quickly,” he said.
A spokesperson for the Southern District of New York did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Trump stunned Washington earlier this month when he selected Pulte – a loyalist who has used his perch as director of the
Short-Term Pick
Even as Trump stressed that Pulte was only a short-term pick for the slot, top Senate Republicans had urged the president to quickly find a permanent spy chief, expressing concern that failing to do so could endanger efforts to renew Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which allows US intelligence agencies to collect foreign nationals’ communications overseas.
As late as Wednesday, Trump was praising Pulte, whose start date he moved up from June 30 to June 19. The president had sought to allay concerns by vowing in a social media post to nominate a permanent DNI “with national security experience” as he pushed for a short-term extension of the spy powers measure.
Democrats threatened to withhold their votes to extend the FISA provision before its slated expiration on Friday if Pulte’s appointment went forward. The president has asked Congress to temporarily extend the expiring surveillance powers while he searched for a permanent pick.
The surveillance authority is slated to lapse after the House failed to pass a three-week extension on a 198 to 218 vote Thursday and departed for a 12-day recess, hours before Trump announced Clayton.
Top Prosecutor
Clayton has not served in the intelligence community but has a record in public service that is likely to assuage some lawmakers who questioned Pulte’s qualifications for the role. After his stint overseeing the SEC ended, Clayton served as Apollo Global Management Inc.’s independent chair while returning to New York-based law firm Sullivan & Cromwell as a senior adviser.
Clayton took over the US attorney’s office after a tumultuous period that saw veteran prosecutors there pitted against Justice Department officials in Washington over the corruption case against former New York City Mayor
The longtime corporate lawyer went into the office with an agenda to focus on violent crime, including human trafficking and gun crime, and policing financial markets. Under Clayton’s leadership, his office has brought cases against former Venezuela President
Clayton has maintained close ties with the president, a relationship partly forged on the golf course. He has only been US attorney for a little over a year. Many attorneys stay for the full presidential term of four years, if not longer.
Departing DNI Tulsi Gabbard has said she is leaving her post to help her husband as he confronts a bone-cancer diagnosis.
FISA Extension
It remains unclear if Clayton’s selection will help Trump secure a quick extension of the spy powers authorization.
Schumer, the Senate’s top Democrat, told reporters that his caucus would continue to block any extension of US surveillance powers so long as Pulte is still set to become acting spy chief on June 19.
“It doesn’t matter what else they do. Pulte’s gotta be gone,” Schumer told reporters Thursday. He declined to offer an opinion about Clayton when pressed.
Republicans lack the votes to extend it on their own, and Senate Intelligence Committee leaders have worked for months to secure a bipartisan deal for a long-term extension of the controversial program. Privacy advocates say the powers facilitate warrantless surveillance of Americans in contact with foreigners.
(Updates with additional details, background throughout)
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