Biden cabinet 2021

drillers shaking their fists;

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/17/climate/deb-haaland-interior-department-native-american.html

Biden Picks Deb Haaland to Lead Interior Department
The historic choice would elevate a Native American to a cabinet secretary position for the first time, and do so at an agency that played a central role in the nation’s long-running abuse of native peoples.

WASHINGTON — In a historic decision, President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. has chosen Deb Haaland, a congressional representative from New Mexico and a Native American, to lead the Interior Department, an agency that for much of the nation’s history played a central role in the dislocation and abuse of Indigenous communities from coast to coast.

Mr. Biden’s transition team announced the decision Thursday. If confirmed by the Senate, Ms. Haaland would be the first Native American to lead a cabinet-level agency. She would oversee a sprawling department responsible for some 500 million acres of public lands, including national parks, oil and gas drilling sites and endangered species habitat.

Her selection was the latest in a series of high-profile cabinet and White House advisory decisions made in recent days, including Thursday’s choice of Michael S. Regan to run the Environmental Protection Agency.

Like Mr. Regan, Ms. Haaland would play a major role in implementing Mr. Biden’s promised climate change agenda. She would further be responsible for working to strengthen federal protections for vast swaths of territory that the Trump administration has opened up to drilling, mining, logging and construction.

Historians and tribal leaders said that her selection represented a watershed moment in the United States’ scarred history with its Native people.

“It’s momentous to see an Indian promoted out of the shadows of American history to a seat at the table in the White House,” said Elizabeth Kronk Warner, dean and professor of law at the University of Utah, and a citizen of the Sault Ste. Marie tribe of Chippewa Indians. “Tribes and the federal government have a relationship that goes back to the 18th century — but despite that relationship, we have never had an American Indian at this level of government.”

Ms. Haaland, a citizen of Laguna Pueblo, one of the country’s 574 federally recognized tribes, would helm the federal agency most responsible for the well-being of the nation’s 1.9 million Indigenous people. Among other things, the Interior Department runs the Bureau of Indian Education and the Bureau of Trust Funds Administration, which manages the financial assets of American Indians held in trust.

For generations, Native Americans have fought the department’s policies and demanded a greater voice in its operation. In one instance, in 1972, about 500 activists took over the department’s headquarters in Washington, D.C., protesting living standards and broken treaties.

Ms. Haaland was not seen as Mr. Biden’s initial choice to run the agency. In the days after the presidential election, he was believed to have been leaning toward Senator Tom Udall, Democrat of New Mexico and a longtime friend who has spent his career pushing to conserve wilderness, according to people close to the transition team.

But a coalition of congressional Democrats, Native Americans and Hollywood celebrities kicked off a campaign urging Mr. Biden to appoint Ms. Haaland. The actor and environmental advocate Mark Ruffalo posted a video on Twitter with tribal leaders speaking in support of Ms. Haaland. And the Lakota People’s Law Action Center launched a petition supported by more than 120 tribal leaders backing her.

“Like no year prior, 2020 has shown us what happens when we fail to see the importance of putting proper leaders in position to safeguard society,” the petition read.

On Thursday, Mr. Udall offered his full-throated support for the choice. “President-Elect Biden has chosen an outstanding leader,” he said. “She will undo the damage of the Trump administration, restore the department’s work force and expertise, uphold our obligations to Native communities, and take the bold action needed to tackle the accelerating climate and nature crises.”

In a statement, Ms. Haaland said, “It would be an honor to move the Biden-Harris climate agenda forward, help repair the government-to-government relationship with Tribes that the Trump Administration has ruined, and serve as the first Native American cabinet secretary in our nation’s history.”

The Presidential Transition
Latest Updates
Updated
Dec. 18, 2020, 2:59 p.m. ET
Biden officials say they didn’t agree to a ‘holiday pause’ in Defense meetings, pushing back against Pentagon officials.
Pence, Pelosi and McConnell receive a coronavirus vaccine. Biden is set to get an injection on Monday.
Lara Trump served on the board of a company through which the Trump political operation spent more than $700 million.
She has already made history once. In 2018, Ms. Haaland and Sharice Davids of Kansas became the first two Native American women elected to Congress.

Ms. Haaland campaigned in 2018 against the Trump administration’s hard-line immigration policies and promoted Indigenous sovereignty as a “35th-generation New Mexican.” She has said that many of the issues affecting native communities, such as low-wage jobs and violence against women, afflict other groups as well.

In 2015, she became the head of the state Democratic Party and helped to flip the New Mexico Statehouse to Democratic control.

A child of military veterans, she attended 13 public schools before graduating from high school, then started a salsa company and worked as a cake decorator before putting herself through college and law school using both food stamps and student loans.

Over the past two years, Ms. Haaland has served on the House Natural Resources Committee, which oversees the Interior Department. Under the Trump administration, the current and former Interior secretaries, David Bernhardt and Ryan Zinke, have used the agency to make it easier to mine and drill on public lands, while also weakening protections on endangered species. Just this week, the Interior Department finalized two rules that limit protections to animals and plants under the Endangered Species Act.

Ms. Haaland has not held back in her fierce criticism of policies that have opened millions of acres to oil and gas drilling.

“The sad fact is that we have a president who is intent on selling off our public lands to his friends for fracking and drilling,” she said in a speech earlier this year. She noted that under Mr. Bernhardt and Mr. Zinke, the Interior Department slashed the size of Bears Ears and Grand Staircase Escalante, national monuments in Utah that are adjacent to Navajo nation territories and a Hopi reservation, opening up the land to mining and drilling.

In her new role, Ms. Haaland could be tasked with restoring protections to the monuments. That land, she said, “is now open to leases and desecration by extractive industries, which will exacerbate climate change and destroy countless sacred sites and erase our history.”

She would also be responsible for executing one of Mr. Biden’s most controversial proposals: his pledge to ban all new hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, on public lands. Already, fossil fuel groups are pushing back, urging Senators to block her confirmation on Capitol Hill.

Ian Prior, a spokesman for The Empowerment Alliance, a pro-fossil-fuel organization, said that Mr. Biden’s choices of Ms. Haaland for the Interior Department, along with his selection this week of Mr. Regan to run the E.P.A., “prove that he is committed to ending the natural gas industry within 15 years.”

Mr. Prior added, “We hope that the Senate looks long and hard at these nominees and holds them accountable during the confirmation process for their policies that would roll back American energy independence.”

Senator John Barrasso, Republican of Wyoming and a senior member of the Senate Energy Committee, which will hold Ms. Haaland’s confirmation hearings, said, “America’s public lands and natural resources are critical to the economy in Wyoming and across the West. While I have not had the opportunity to work with Representative Haaland on these issues, I will keep an open mind during the vetting process.”

If she is confirmed by the Senate, her departure from the House could briefly make it more difficult for Mr. Biden to advance his legislative agenda, since it would narrow the Democrats’ already razor-thin majority until a special election could be held in her Democratic-majority district.

For that reason, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was said to have been urging Mr. Biden not to select Ms. Haaland. But on Wednesday afternoon, Ms. Pelosi appeared to give her blessing. “If she is the President-elect’s choice for Interior, then he will have made an excellent choice,” she said.
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/22/gop-resistance-deb-haaland-470979

‘She became an easy target’: GOP opposition to Haaland rankles Native Americans

Her supporters say she’s facing a level of criticism above and beyond the normal fiery Washington political rhetoric.

Haaland, a member of the Laguna Pueblo, has been a sharp critic of fossil fuel development, a stance that has made her nomination among the more contentious of Biden’s picks. And she may also face tough questioning from the Democratic chair of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, Sen. Joe Manchin, who is the most pro-fossil fuel Democrat and whose opposition may have scuttled another Biden nominee, Neera Tanden.

upload_2021-2-25_14-56-38.png


upload_2021-2-25_14-57-13.png

upload_2021-2-25_14-58-15.png

upload_2021-2-25_14-57-42.png
 
https://www.politico.com/news/2021/02/22/gop-resistance-deb-haaland-470979

‘She became an easy target’: GOP opposition to Haaland rankles Native Americans

Her supporters say she’s facing a level of criticism above and beyond the normal fiery Washington political rhetoric.

Haaland, a member of the Laguna Pueblo, has been a sharp critic of fossil fuel development, a stance that has made her nomination among the more contentious of Biden’s picks. And she may also face tough questioning from the Democratic chair of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee, Sen. Joe Manchin, who is the most pro-fossil fuel Democrat and whose opposition may have scuttled another Biden nominee, Neera Tanden.

View attachment 253109

View attachment 253110
View attachment 253112
View attachment 253111


Not going to earn your pay-to-post crumbs if you post links to highlight gop resistance to the appointment but then quote narrative about Joe Manchin- a Democrat- and his opposition or footdragging.

Might need to up your game a little. You know in a post-trump environment it is harder to get your paid posts in.

Not going to get that extra potato in your rations this month.
 

bye felicia

https://apnews.com/article/neera-tanden-withdraws-nomination-1f9245ff58e11533c16d7b3eff11db46
Budget nominee Tanden withdraws nomination amid opposition

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden’s pick to head the Office of Management and Budget, Neera Tanden, has withdrawn her nomination after she faced opposition from key Democratic and Republican senators for her controversial tweets.

Her withdrawal marks the first high-profile defeat of one of Biden’s nominees. Thirteen of the 23 Cabinet nominees requiring Senate approval have been confirmed, most with strong bipartisan support.

“Unfortunately, it now seems clear that there is no path forward to gain confirmation, and I do not want continued consideration of my nomination to be a distraction from your other priorities,” Tanden wrote in a letter to Biden. The president, in a statement, said he has “utmost respect for her record of accomplishment, her experience and her counsel” and pledged to find her another role in his administration.
 
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/xavier-becerra-nominee-department-of-health-and-human-services/
Xavier Becerra nominated by Biden to lead Department of Health and Human Services

President-elect Joe Biden is nominating California Attorney General Xavier Becerra to serve as his first secretary of health and human services, his transition team said in a press release early Monday. He would oversee a sprawling department set to play a leading role in the distribution of a COVID-19 vaccine, and he would be tasked with helping to build public trust in it.

Mr. Biden's other choices for key public health roles were also announced in the release, including Dr. Vivek Murthy to be surgeon general, Rochelle Walensky to be director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith to be COVID-19 Equity Task Force co-chair, Dr. Anthony Fauci to be chief medical adviser on COVID-19, Jeff Zients to be counselor to the president and coordinator of the COVID-19 response, and Natalie Quillian to be deputy coordinator of the COVID-19 response. Fauci will appear remotely at a Biden meeting with top health advisers and leaders of health agencies on Tuesday, a person familiar with the plans tells CBS News.

Becerra, 62, has served as California's top prosecutor since 2017 when he succeeded now-Vice President-elect Kamala Harris in the role. He served in Congress for more than 20 years and was once seen as a potential House Speaker.

If confirmed by the U.S. Senate, Becerra would be the first Latino to hold the role — a symbolic nomination at a time when Latinos are disproportionately affected by the medical and economic affects of the coronavirus pandemic.

The Congressional Hispanic Caucus, which Becerra once chaired, said late Sunday that "in this moment of crisis" for Latinos reeling from the pandemic, his nomination is welcomed news. The group added that it is "encouraging President-elect Biden to appoint five Latinos in the Cabinet, including Latinas in prominent positions. We will continue to work in partnership with the Biden-Harris transition team to assemble the most diverse administration in American history."

A Becerra associate told CBS News, "We need a Latino in this role." This person, who was granted anonymity because he wasn't permitted to speak publicly about the matter, said Becerra was asked to serve by Mr. Biden in recent days.

This person also said Becerra's ability to speak Spanish fluently should help him explain and defend vaccination programs to parts of the Latino community that primarily speak Spanish in ways other public officials cannot.

Becerra was also said to be under consideration to succeed Harris in the Senate or to serve as Mr. Biden's first attorney general.

While he has no medical training or experience in public health, he has served as a top defender of the Affordable Care Act. While in Congress, he was a leading advocate for passage of the law and as California's attorney general, he has defended the law in federal court, including in recent weeks before the U.S. Supreme Court.

Becerra's nomination also means that Mr. Biden has nominated two Latinos to what his team calls the "Big Six" Cabinet seats — State, Defense, Justice, Treasury, Homeland Security and Health and Human Services.

Walensky, the president-elect's choice to lead the CDC, is currently the chief of infectious diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital and a Harvard Medical School professor. She is an expert on AIDS and HIV and would succeed Robert R. Redfield as head of the Atlanta-based agency that has seen its public role significantly curtailed over the course of the coronavirus pandemic as observers question its independence from political interference. The position does not require Senate confirmation.

The president-elect has nominated Alejandro Mayorkas, a Cuban-American, to serve as the first Latino secretary of Homeland Security. Janet Yellen is Mr. Biden's Treasury nominee and would be the first woman to hold the role. Antony Blinken has been nominated to be Secretary of State. The other positions remain unfilled.

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2...e-taken-nearly-10-million-big-pharma-analysis

GOP Senators Opposed to Becerra for HHS Have Taken Nearly $10 Million From Big Pharma: Analysis
"While Xavier Becerra has spent his career taking on the pharmaceutical industry for their corrupt price gouging, Senate Republicans have spent their political careers lining their pockets with millions of dollars from Big Pharma."

  • Ranking Member Mike Crapo (R-Id.) "has accepted over $1.8 million from the health sector throughout his career, including over $616,000 from Big Pharma. Crapo also raked in contributions from the healthcare and financial sectors as he was poised to become the Committee chairman at the end of last year," according to Accountable's report.
  • Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) "has accepted over $3.7 million from the health sector throughout his career, including nearly $1 million from Big Pharma."
  • Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) "has accepted over $1.7 million from the health sector throughout his career, including over $1 million from Big Pharma. Cornyn said the quiet part out loud when he brought up concerns with Becerra's lack of ties to the pharmaceutical industry, implicitly admitting he'd prefer a nominee in the pocket of Big Pharma."
  • Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) "has accepted over $4.8 million from the health sector throughout his career, including $1.5 million from Big Pharma."
  • Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) "has accepted over $5.1 million from the health sector throughout his career, including over $736,000 from Big Pharma."
  • Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) "has accepted over $2.7 million from the health sector throughout his career, including over $651,000 from Big Pharma."
Despite Wednesday's evenly split vote—which made Becerra the first of Biden's Cabinet nominees not to be favorably approved out of committeehis confirmation is not doomed. Once Democrats introduce "a motion to discharge his nomination and hold an additional four hours of debate," Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) can "bring the nomination up for a full Senate vote," Politico reported.
 
https://www.commondreams.org/news/2...e-taken-nearly-10-million-big-pharma-analysis

GOP Senators Opposed to Becerra for HHS Have Taken Nearly $10 Million From Big Pharma: Analysis
"While Xavier Becerra has spent his career taking on the pharmaceutical industry for their corrupt price gouging, Senate Republicans have spent their political careers lining their pockets with millions of dollars from Big Pharma."

  • Ranking Member Mike Crapo (R-Id.) "has accepted over $1.8 million from the health sector throughout his career, including over $616,000 from Big Pharma. Crapo also raked in contributions from the healthcare and financial sectors as he was poised to become the Committee chairman at the end of last year," according to Accountable's report.
  • Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) "has accepted over $3.7 million from the health sector throughout his career, including nearly $1 million from Big Pharma."
  • Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) "has accepted over $1.7 million from the health sector throughout his career, including over $1 million from Big Pharma. Cornyn said the quiet part out loud when he brought up concerns with Becerra's lack of ties to the pharmaceutical industry, implicitly admitting he'd prefer a nominee in the pocket of Big Pharma."
  • Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.) "has accepted over $4.8 million from the health sector throughout his career, including $1.5 million from Big Pharma."
  • Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) "has accepted over $5.1 million from the health sector throughout his career, including over $736,000 from Big Pharma."
  • Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) "has accepted over $2.7 million from the health sector throughout his career, including over $651,000 from Big Pharma."
Despite Wednesday's evenly split vote—which made Becerra the first of Biden's Cabinet nominees not to be favorably approved out of committeehis confirmation is not doomed. Once Democrats introduce "a motion to discharge his nomination and hold an additional four hours of debate," Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) can "bring the nomination up for a full Senate vote," Politico reported.


That's a bullshit biased way of laying out the data.

Pharma split almost 50/50 right down the middle on support for republicans and dems in 2020 - up majorly for dems. You can plow into that data if you want make the case that the dems are in the hip pocket of big pharma but I suspect that you do not.
 
There is no shortage of future cabinet members to advise the President on how to run the country to achieve the Democratic Party dreams.:)
https://www.npr.org/2021/03/08/9749...elans-given-protected-status-in-united-states
Undocumented Venezuelans Given Protected Status In United States March 8, 20214:15 PM ET
gettyimages-1229310788-biden-venezuela-af4e3a237fe2f1062157a313d7202630cc148941-s800-c85.jpg

A Joe Biden supporter with a Venezuelan flag cheers during a Biden campaign event at Camping World Stadium on October 27, 2020 in Orlando, Florida.

Octavio Jones/Getty Images
Updated at 4:25 p.m. ET

The Biden administration said Monday that it will allow many Venezuelans who are already in the country illegally to remain because of the humanitarian and economic crisis in the socialist South American nation that is an adversary of the U.S.

Carrying out a promise President Biden made on the campaign trail, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas granted Temporary Protected Status to an estimated 320,000 Venezuelans.

Despite being home to some of the world's largest oil reserves, Venezuela has fallen into a life-threatening economic and humanitarian crises that have caused more than 5 million Venezuelans to flee in search of food, medicine and shelter.

"This designation is due to the extraordinary and temporary conditions in Venezuela that prevent the nationals who are here from returning safely," said a senior administration official in a briefing with reporters. "This is a complex humanitarian crisis: widespread hunger, malnutrition, growing influence and presence of non-state armed groups, a crumbling infrastructure. I mean, you could go on and on."

The decision represents a dramatic shift in policy from the previous administration, which withstood bipartisan calls to grant the protections to Venezuelans.


Trump curried favor with some south Florida voters after imposing several rounds of economic sanctions on the government of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro.

Yet while former President Donald Trump issued an executive order on his last day in office deferring the removal of Venezuelans for 18 months, he stopped short of granting TPS protections during his four years.

But he also faced opposition from base GOP voters who opposed allowing more immigration into the country.

Fernand Amandi, a Miami-based Democratic political strategist and pollster, said granting TPS to Venezuelans could open up a new relationship for Biden with an electorate that largely supported Trump in 2020.

"This was a group of Venezuelan American voters," Amandi said. "Trump really went after them. Romanced them during the four years of his presidency, but couldn't quite close the deal on offering permanent TPS, which is what the community desperately was looking for. Biden did."

Temporary Protected Status is granted to those from countries ravaged by natural disasters or war, allowing them to live and work in the United States until conditions improve back home.

For much of the last four years, the Trump administration sought to terminate the program for immigrants from several countries in Latin America and Africa, but was hampered by the courts.


Benjamin Gedan, former Venezuela director at the National Security Council in the Obama administration, said politics play a role, but he noted there has long been bipartisan support for permitting Venezuelans in the United States to remain in the country legally.

"Venezuela is a failed state in every single measure," he said. "There's simply not enough food to go around. Hospitals had collapsed before the pandemic. You have a repressive dictatorship and extraordinary levels of violence in the street. You have pro-government militias attacking protesters. It's just inhumane to send people back into those conditions."
 
big tech lobbies hate her...

washingtonpost.com/technology/2021/03/09/lina-khan-biden-ftc/
Biden to nominate Big Tech critic Lina Khan to Federal Trade Commission
Khan emerged as a prominent antitrust scholar after publishing a 2017 paper exploring Amazon’s power

SAN FRANCISCO — One of the most prominent antitrust scholars to urge government to reexamine the way Big Tech’s power is regulated is being tapped to join the Federal Trade Commission.

Lina Khan, perhaps best known for her 2017 paper “Amazon’s Antitrust Paradox,” will be nominated to the agency charged in part with regulating monopoly power, a person familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity told The Washington Post. Khan’s nomination has not been officially announced.

The Technology 202: One of Silicon Valley's top challengers is up for a key Justice Department position

Khan first emerged on the antitrust scene as a 28-year-old Yale law student, with her searing 24,000-word article on why U.S. antitrust law isn’t equipped to deal with tech giants such as Amazon and their modern version of power.

Khan is the latest Big Tech critic that the Biden administration has tapped to join the administration, setting up a likely hard-line stance against the powerful industry. Tim Wu, who has been critical of the industry, will work on competition and technology policy on the National Economic Council, and Vanita Gupta, who has advocated for civil rights change in Big Tech, faced Congress on Tuesday for a role as associate attorney general at the Justice Department.

Biden’s nomination of Khan is also notable because Jay Carney, who was previously Biden’s vice presidential communications director, and then the press secretary for President Barack Obama, is Amazon’s senior vice president of global corporate affairs.

In her 2017 paper, Khan presented a way to look at antitrust that went beyond examining just near-term effects on consumer pricing, which has been a cornerstone of American antitrust policy interpretation for decades. She showed how Amazon was controlling competitors at little cost to itself — seemingly benefiting consumers in the near term, but also causing far-reaching ripples through the rest of the industry.

“The current market is not always a good indication of competitive harm,” Khan told The Post in 2017. “They have to ask what the future market will look like.”

The White House and Khan did not respond to requests for comment. The news of Khan’s nomination was first reported by Politico.

Khan has had a meteoric rise from a law student with an antitrust paper that essentially went viral — no small feat with scholarly work — to now serving as an associate professor at Columbia Law School, focusing on antitrust law and anti-monopoly tradition, according to her bio. She previously worked as a legal adviser to FTC Commissioner Rohit Chopra and worked with Rep. David N. Cicilline (D-R.I.) as counsel for the House Judiciary antitrust subcommittee. There, she helped lead the House investigation into anti-competitive behavior from Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google.

The panel’s report, released in October, found that the tech giants relied on harmful means to rise to and solidify their dominance in their respective niches.

House investigation faults Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google for engaging in anti-competitive monopoly tactics

Khan’s theories are also sometimes controversial within the antitrust scholarly community, though many scholars have heralded them as the start of a new wave of thinking.

The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, a nonpartisan organization that receives funding from many tech giants including Google, Apple, Facebook and Amazon, said Tuesday that Khan’s theories will harm U.S. companies and referred to them as “hipster antitrust,” a term critics have used for years to describe Khan’s work.

“Khan’s antitrust populism threatens to derail traditional enforcement of antitrust laws as an engine for enhancing consumer benefits and spurring innovation,” the organization’s director of antitrust and innovation policy, Aurelien Portuese, said in a statement.

Powerful tech companies have come under increased governmental scrutiny in recent years. The CEOs of Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple were grilled by Congress over their far-reaching market power last summer. The Justice Department sued Google alleging multiple violations of antitrust law in October, and the FTC and dozens of state attorneys general filed antitrust suits against Facebook in December.

The chief executives of Facebook, Google and Twitter are expected to appear before Congress again later this month.

Public Citizen, an organization that advocates against corporate power, praised the decision to appoint Khan in a statement, calling it “a hopeful sign that the Biden administration intends to take a more aggressive approach to antitrust enforcement.”

Jeffrey Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy, an organization that often advocates for tech regulations, said Khan could make the FTC relevant again after decades of the agency falling behind on antitrust issues.

“This is a vital nomination that can help bring the FTC back from the morass it has created for decades,” he said in an email.
 

Booby prize for the boob.

The big winner will be the skin color person they move into his slot on the appeals court, and then on up on to the supreme court later.

And once again, Merrick takes it up the bobo.

Most conservatives consider this a win or at least the best choice among the losers being considered. He is a lefty but if it had not been for the dems being stuck on stupid about Garland, they had ten other far, far left loons that they want.

Holder, Gonzales, Barr, Lynch. AG's are forgotten the day they leave office compared to Supreme Court Justices.

Booby prize.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top