The U.S. senate voted by an overwhelming, veto-proof majority to revoke the Bush administration's authority to bypass the congress for approval of United States Attorneys.
Democrats say the Bush administration abused that authority when it fired the eight prosecutors and proposed replacing some with White House loyalists.Kit Bond, R-MO and Chuck Hagel, R-NE voted against the measure.
"If you politicize the prosecutors, you politicize everybody in the whole chain of law enforcement," said Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.
The bill, which has yet to be considered in the House, would set a 120-day deadline for the administration to appoint an interim prosecutor. If the interim appointment is not confirmed by the Senate in that time, a permanent replacement would be named by a federal district judge.
Essentially, the Senate returned the law regarding the appointments of U.S. attorneys to where it was before Congress passed the Patriot Act, including the unilateral appointment authority the administration had sought in the wake of the 9/11 terror attacks.
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