Sullivan wants Wray to complete FBI director term over Patel – Washington Examiner
National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan stated that FBI Director Christopher Wray should complete his term following President-elect Donald Trump’s nomination of Kash Patel to lead the FBI. Wray, who was appointed by Trump and retained by President Biden, has three years remaining in his ten-year term. Sullivan emphasized the importance of maintaining the tradition of FBI directors serving their full terms to uphold the agency’s independence from political influence. On NBC News, he reiterated that the Biden administration prefers Wray to finish his term and adhere to this norm of political neutrality. Sullivan also highlighted the unique role of the FBI director within the U.S. government, contrasting it with Trump’s past decision to fire former FBI director James Comey during his first term.
Jake Sullivan wants Wray to complete term after Trump taps Patel to lead FBI
National security adviser Jake Sullivan said FBI Director Christopher Wray should finish the remainder of his term as President-elect Donald Trump said he is nominating Kash Patel for the role.
Wray, a Trump appointee President Joe Biden did not remove, has three years left to serve in his ten-year term. Sullivan said that while he would not respond directly to Patel’s nomination, the Biden administration prefers Wray finish his term to follow precedent.
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“We, the Biden administration, adhere to the long-standing norm that FBI directors serve out their full terms because the FBI director is a unique player in the American government system,” Sullivan said on NBC News’s Meet the Press on Sunday. “They’re appointed for ten-year terms, not terms just for the duration of a given president.”
“We would like to ensure that the FBI remains an independent institution insulated away from politics,” Sullivan added.
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When speaking on CNN’s State of the Union the same day, Sullivan again emphasized the long-standing tradition of keeping the FBI politically neutral by having FBI directors serve their full ten-year terms.
Trump, in his first term, fired then-FBI director James Comey less than four years into Comey’s term. The GOP leader then nominated Wray to take over his post. Wray was confirmed by the Senate by a 92–5 vote.
Wray suggested in an interview with NBC News this spring that he’d like to stay in his job if Trump won, as long as the FBI can maintain its longstanding standards of not bringing politics into its investigations.
“As long as I think I can continue doing that in a way that adheres to all those rules and norms, it’s what I’d like to keep doing,” he told the outlet.
Republicans have, however, accused the FBI of indeed acting politically in its investigations, prompting their calls for changes within the agency and the nomination of Patel to oversee this.
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