Trump administration defends Homeland Security leadership

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FILE - In this July 21, 2020 file photo, Department of Homeland Security Acting Secretary Chad Wolf, speaks during a news conference in Washington. A congressional watchdog agency has found that the top two Trump administration officials in the U.S. Department of Homeland Security were improperly appointed to the posts under federal law. The Government Accountability Office says acting DHS Secretary Chad Wolf and acting deputy Ken Cuccinelli are ineligible to run the agency under the Vacancy Reform Act. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

WASHINGTON ā€“ A nonpartisan congressional watchdog's finding that the two top officials at the Department of Homeland Security are legally ineligible to hold their posts is ā€œerroneousā€ and should be withdrawn, a Trump administration official said Monday.

Acting DHS general counsel Chad Mizelle defended the legality of the administration's appointments and said the timing and the author of the finding by the General Accountability Office appear to be politically motivated.

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ā€œThe GAO should rescind its erroneous report immediately,ā€ Mizelle wrote in a letter to the general counsel of the congressional watchdog agency.

GAO said in the finding released Friday that the appointment of acting DHS Secretary Chad Wolf and acting Deputy Ken Cuccinelli violate a federal law that regulates the appointment of senior government officials.

It is an important issue because there are pending lawsuits challenging DHS actions related to immigration and law enforcement that argue in part that Trump administration policies are invalid because the top officials are not legally eligible to hold those positions.

Mizelle, in addition to arguing that the GAO finding is legally flawed, questioned the timing of its release about 80 days before the November election and noted that the principal author had previously worked on a Democratic campaign and policy committee.

ā€œAs the reader reaches the reportā€™s conclusion, he is left with the sinking and inescapable feeling that something is afoot in the swamp,ā€ he wrote in a letter released by DHS.

The GAO report comes at a time of intense scrutiny of DHS over Trump administration immigration policies and the July deployment of federal agents in tactical gear to confront protesters outside federal buildings in Portland, Oregon.

It also comes as Miles Taylor, who served as DHS chief of staff from 2017-19, has endorsed former Vice President Joe Biden in the presidential race. He accused President Donald Trump of using DHS for ā€œpolitical benefitā€ by focusing on issues that would help his campaign at the expense of more pressing matters.

ā€œAfter serving for more than two years in the Department of Homeland Securityā€™s leadership during the Trump administration, I can attest that the country is less secure as a direct result of the presidentā€™s actions,ā€ Taylor wrote in an opinion piece in The Washington Post.

Taylor served under Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, who signed an order of succession at DHS that is at the heart of the dispute over whether the appointments of Wolf and Cuccinelli are valid.

GAO determined that Nielsen was improperly replaced by Kevin McAleenan and, therefore, the later appointments of Wolf and Cuccinelli were invalid.

Mizelle counters in his letter that the succession was later clarified by Nielsen in an internal memo and when she swore in McAleenan as her replacement.

Ultimately, the issue is likely to be resolved by a court hearing one of the challenges to DHS policy and its leadership, said Stephen Vladeck, a professor at the University of Texas School of Law who has studied federal vacancy law and believes the appointments are invalid.

The Trump administration should act quickly to replace the officials, Vladeck warned. ā€œEvery day they leave Wolf in office they are increasing the risk that his appointment gets struck down and a whole bunch of polices get struck down with it," he said.


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