They just have to stall his actions for a few more months and then President Biden can rule by decree. Even if your attorney is currently representing you or your business in a court case, you can fire that attorney without notice.

Not unless we are talking Pence in 2024 because I doubt he’ll hire them.

President Trump on Saturday officially fired the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, where Manhattan is located, Attorney General William P. Barr said in a letter. Attorneys by deleting two provisions: (a) the 120-day maximum term for the Attorney General's interim appointees, and (b) the subsequent interim appointment authority of Federal District Courts. No one can know the outcome of a case, and good attorneys don't promise a win.

Answer Save. The whole episode showed just exactly how a judge’s power to fill a US attorney vacancy can be abused for partisan or other improper purposes.

The end result of doubling down on that over and over and over will be bloody. But TRUMP! Once a case is ongoing, though, you may need to get the Court's permission to change attorneys. The fact that this may create chaos and bad precedents seems to acceptable; the courts can clean it up after we have an acceptable, establishment approved president. I’ve spent my life dealing with government officers wanting to exercise their powers, but making a procedural mistake.

Congress purporting to give the judiciary the authority to appoint someone into the executive. Another way to prevent getting this page in the future is to use Privacy Pass. You guys keep going with nevermind rules or principles and then complaining that the other side isn’t playing by rules or principles. Firing someone is never pleasant or easy, but sometimes it's necessary. So, now that circumstances have changed to prevent either Carpenito from assuming the interim slot, or Taylor to be confirmed to the permanent position, I expect Berman to file suit to get to a final resolution. The 1979 memo written by the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel appears to answer the question of who can remove Berman. The most likely reason that he is being removed, this late, is that he and his AUSAs worked closely with Mueller and his prosecutors. Barr also could not do the firing himself. Yes, such a decision is always a gamble but Berman seems to have taken the smart bet here. No.

That raises the question of whether Congress has established that presidents may remove prosecutors appointed by courts. That set up the possibility of a protracted fight in court until Mr. Barr told the U.S. attorney, Geoffrey S. Berman, on Saturday that the president had fired him, and he acquiesced.

Has there ever been a more obviously unconstitutional statute than this one?

Under those circumstances, it is unreasonable to think that merely making an interim appointment impermissibly entangles judges in the functioning of the Executive Branch.

Howard L. Lv 7.

Or how much they be paid?

It depends on the whim of the judges.

District attorneys are generally elected.