Trump FBI Nominee Kash Patel Must Restore Americans’ Faith in Agency, GOP Senator Says

GOP Sen. Chuck Grassley wrote that he believes that whoever leads the bureau must ‘chart a new course.’

A leading Republican senator who is in line to become the Senate Judiciary chairman said that President-elect Donald Trump’s choice to head the FBI, former national security official Kash Patel, must restore Americans’ confidence in the federal law enforcement bureau.

On Nov. 30, Trump announced his nomination of Patel, who has backed the president-elect’s assertions about how government officials have weaponized agencies against his administration.

Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), who is set to become the Senate president pro tempore when Republicans take control of the chamber in January, wrote on social media platform X that Patel “must prove to Congress he will reform [and] restore public trust in FBI.”

The senator said that current FBI Director Christopher Wray, named by Trump in 2017 to a standard 10-year term, “has failed at fundamental duties” and that anyone who leads the agency has to “chart a new course” for transparency and accountability.

Trump’s nomination of Patel means that Wray must either resign or be fired after Trump takes office on Jan. 20, 2025. There has been no indication that Wray is looking to step down from the role.

“Every president wants people that are loyal to themselves,” Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) told ABC News, adding that he does not have “any complaints” about how Wray has “done his job right now.”

A president has “the right to make nominations,” Rounds said, before noting that the job is normally for 10 years, a length meant to insulate the FBI from the political influence of changing administrations. Trump has been critical of the FBI, namely after agents searched his Mar-a-Lago residence in Florida for classified documents, ultimately resulting in the appointment of a special counsel to bring criminal charges against him.

“We’ll see what his process is, and whether he actually makes that nomination,“ Rounds said. ”And then, if he does, just as with anybody who is nominated for one of these positions, once they’ve been nominated by the president, then the president gets, you know, the benefit of the doubt on the nomination, but we still go through a process.

“That can be sometimes advice, sometimes it is consent.”

Several other Republicans on Dec. 1 signaled that they would back Patel, a former contributor to The Epoch Times, as the head of the bureau.

Sen. Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.) told NBC News Sunday that Patel “represents the type of change that we need to see in the FBI“ and that the agency ”needs to be cleaned out.”

He said “there are serious problems” in the bureau, and the “American public knows it.”

In announcing the move, Trump said that Patel played a key role in uncovering what he called a “hoax” that linked his 2016 presidential campaign with the Russian government.

“I am proud to announce that Kashyap ‘Kash’ Patel will serve as the next director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation,” Trump posted on Truth Social on Nov. 30. “Kash is a brilliant lawyer, investigator, and ‘America First’ fighter who has spent his career exposing corruption, defending justice, and protecting the American people.”

In a recent interview, Patel said that he wants to close the FBI’s headquarters in Washington.

“I’d shut down the FBI Hoover Building on day one and reopen the next day as a museum of the deep state,” he said. “And I’d take the 7,000 employees that work in that building and send them across America to chase down criminals.”

The Epoch Times contacted the FBI on Nov. 1 for comment on Trump’s announcement.

“Every day, the men and women of the FBI continue to work to protect Americans from a growing array of threats,” an agency spokesperson told media outlets on Nov. 30. “Director Wray’s focus remains on the men and women of the FBI, the people we do the work with, and the people we do the work for.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

 

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