Donald Trumpâs plan to nominate as FBI director the âdeep stateâ conspiracy theorist Kash Patel, a virulent critic of the bureau who has threatened to fire its top echelons and shut down the agencyâs headquarters, is facing blowback in Congress as US senators begin to flex their muscles ahead of a contentious confirmation process.
Politicians from both main parties took to the Sunday talk shows to express starkly divergent views on Patel, whom Trump announced on Saturday as his pick to lead the most powerful law enforcement agency in the US. The move is dependent on the incumbent FBI chief, Christopher Wray, who Trump himself placed in the job in 2017, either being fired or resigning.
It is already clear that confirming Patel through the US Senate is likely to be less than plain sailing. Mike Rounds, a Republican senator from South Dakota, indicated that Patel could face a tough confirmation battle.
Rounds pointedly sang the praises of the existing FBI director in an interview with ABCâs This Week. He said that Wray, who still has three more years of his 10-year term to serve, was a âvery good manâ, adding that he had âno objections about the way that he is doing his job right nowâ.
The senator also emphasised the separation of powers between president and Senate, signaling possible trouble for Patel. Rounds said he gave presidents âthe benefit of the doubtâ, but also emphasised that âwe have a constitutional role to play ⦠thatâs the processâ.
Other Republican senators rallied to Patelâs side. Ted Cruz, the senator from Texas, told CBSâs Face the Nation that he believed Patel would be confirmed.
âPatel is a very strong nominee to take on the partisan corruption of the FBI.â
Bill Hagerty, a Republican senator from Tennessee, said on NBCâs Meet the Press that he would vote to confirm Patel. âKash is the best at uncovering whatâs happened to the FBI and I look forward to seeing him taking it apart,â he said.
Patel is a Trump loyalist who has published childrenâs books featuring âKing Donaldâ. He has long denigrated the FBI as a pillar of what he calls the âdeep stateâ or the âcorrupt ruling classâ.
In an interview with Shawn Ryan in September, Patel vowed to âshut downâ the FBIâs headquarters in Washington DC and reopen the building the following day as a âmuseum of the deep stateâ.
He has also threatened to use the power of federal law enforcement to go after those he claims are responsible for corrupting the federal government, a list of whom he published in his memoir. Jake Sullivan, Joe Bidenâs current national security adviser, was among that list: Patel called him âone of the corrupt actors of the first orderâ.
Sullivan was asked by ABCâs This Week whether he was worried personally about Patelâs potential leadership of the FBI, given the threats against him. He declined to comment, saying he was wholly focused on keeping the country safe in the remaining 50 days of his term in office.
But he did highlight that Biden had kept Wray on as FBI chief, despite having inherited the official from Trump. Sullivan said that Wray served âwith distinction, entirely insulated from politics or the partisan preferences of the current sitting president. This is a good, deep bipartisan tradition that President Biden has adhered to.â
Jamie Raskin, a House Democrat from Maryland, challenged the claim by Trump and Patel that the FBI had been politically weaponised under Biden to go after Republicans. He pointed out on CNNâs State of the Union that over the past four years the FBI had prosecuted the disgraced Democratic senator from New Jersey, Bob Menendez, and the Texas Democrat Henry Cuellar.
âI think thatâs what they mean when they talk about politicization in the deep state â anybody who doesnât do the will of Donald Trump,â Raskin said.
According to an Axios report on Sunday, Trump had initially planned to appoint Patel as deputy FBI director but changed his mind after his pick to head the agency, the state attorney general of Missouri, Andrew Bailey, failed to impress him. Raising Patel to the number one position makes the move far more politically loaded.
Despite the storm he is generating, Trump shows no sign of moderating his leadership choices for his upcoming administration. Over the weekend he tapped Charles Kushner, father of his son-in-law Jared Kushner and a convicted felon whom Trump pardoned in 2020, as US ambassador to France.
On Sunday, Trump announced on Truth Social that he had chosen his daughter Tiffanyâs father-in-law, Massad Boulos, to be senior adviser on Arab and Middle Eastern affairs. Boulos, a Lebanese billionaire, was active in Trumpâs presidential campaign as a liaison with Arab American and Muslim leaders.
Trump has also picked a county sheriff, Chad Chronister, from Florida to head the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). The agency will have a key role in attempting to fulfill Trumpâs pledge to staunch the cross-border flow of fentanyl and other drugs into the US, which is already causing diplomatic tensions with Canada and Mexico.
Chronisterâs father-in-law, Edward DeBartolo, was pardoned by Trump three years ago on a 1998 conviction for involvement in a gambling fraud case. DeBartolo, the former owner of the San Francisco 49ers American football team, was fined $1m and suspended by the NFL for a year.