As senators prepare to consider President-elect Donald Trump's picks for his Cabinet, they may be doing so without a well-established staple of the confirmation process: an FBI background check.
The Trump transition team has so far not signed the requisite agreements with the White House or the Justice Department to allow the FBI to screen his personnel choices, both for the process of obtaining security clearances and meeting the Senate's usual standards for nominations.
That means the Senate could be asked to vote on Trump's picks without the usual rigorous background checking meant to uncover personal problems, criminal histories or other red flags that would raise questions about a nominee's suitability for the job. There already are questions about problematic issues related to a number of the people Trump wants in his administration.
There are very real liabilities on the security side if you don't get this right, said Dan Meyer, a Washington lawyer at the Tully Rinckey law firm who specialises in background checks, security clearances and federal employment law.
At issue is a memorandum of understanding under which a president or in this case, an incoming one submits requests for name and background checks and the FBI commits to flagging to the White House any adverse information uncovered during the process.
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But that document has not yet been signed, with the Trump transition team relying instead on internal campaign aides, allied groups and law firms on the outside to support the personnel effort.
Trump for years has regarded FBI leadership with suspicion, in part because of the Russian election interference investigation that shadowed his first term and more recently because of FBI investigations into his hoarding of classified documents and his efforts to undo the results of the 2020 election that led to his indictment last year.
A Justice Department spokesperson said Wednesday that discussions were ongoing with the Trump transition team about signing the memo.
In a statement last week, the department said it was committed to ensuring an orderly and effective transition to the next administration.
We are prepared to deliver briefings to the transition team on our operations and responsibilities, and we stand ready to process requests for security clearances for those who will need access to national security information, the statement said.
For those appointees whose jobs involve a security clearance, a background check would be required. But once Trump takes office on January 20, 2025, he could simply order that people be given a security clearance, as he was reported to have done for son-in-law Jared Kushner during his first term.
The president is the head of the personnel security system, Meyer said. The director of national intelligence is his executive agent for that. The president could issue an executive order and he could change the security system in two seconds. It's all his.
Senate GOP leaders have said they would launch confirmation hearings as soon as the new Congress convenes on January 3, and hope to begin voting on nominees as soon as inauguration day.
Lawmakers are complaining about what they see as insufficient screening of the picks they're being asked to consider. Two Democratic House members, Don Beyer of Virginia and Ted Lieu of California, introduced a bill Tuesday that would codify the FBI's role in the background check process for political appointees of the president.
The issue is of particular relevance given the eyebrow-raising backgrounds of some of Trump's picks.
Trump's choice for attorney general, former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz, faced a Justice Department sex trafficking investigation into allegations involving underage girls that ended with no federal charges against him. There was also a House Ethics inquiry into whether Gaetz engaged in sexual misconduct and illicit drug use, accepted improper gifts and sought to obstruct government investigations of his conduct allegations that he denies.
Asked Wednesday if she was concerned by the allegations, Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine said, of course.
I said from the beginning that I was shocked by the nomination given the many allegations, she added, "but that's why it's important that the Senate go through its process of making sure that we have a background check, that we have a Senate investigation which involves extensive interviews and questionnaires and then a public hearing.
Pete Hegseth, picked for the role of defence secretary, was accused of sexual assault in 2017 after a speaking appearance at a Republican women's event in Monterey, California, but was not charged after a police investigation.
His lawyer, Timothy Parlatore, described the sexual encounter as consensual and confirmed that Hegseth paid the woman a sum as part of a confidential settlement. Hegseth did so to head off a threatened lawsuit, according to Parlatore, who said his client was the victim of blackmail and a successful extortion.
Democrats are signalling their interest in rigorous exploration of potential problem areas.
"If there's a cursory background check, like we call 20 people that's not going to be appropriate, said Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed, the current chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee. He will be the committee's top Democrat next year, as Republicans regain the majority, when it takes up Hegseth's nomination.
The selection of former Democratic Rep. Tulsi Gabbard for director of national intelligence has alarmed US intelligence analysts who point to her past criticism of Ukraine, comments supportive of Russia as well as secret meetings with Syrian president Bashar Assad, a close ally of Russia and Iran.
The Senate has a responsibility to closely examine Gabbard and should not approve the confirmation just because Republicans feel a loyalty to Trump, said Rep. Jim Himes, D-Conn., his party's ranking member on the House Intelligence Committee.
The Republican senator who votes to confirm Matt Gaetz or Robert Kennedy or Tulsi Gabbard will be remembered by history as somebody who completely gave up their responsibility to Donald Trump, Himes said Sunday on CBS' Face the Nation.
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