Restoring Executive Power To Appoint United States Attorneys Act of 2025
Restoring Executive Power To Appoint United States Attorneys Act of 2025
Plain Language Summary
# Summary of S. 2634: Restoring Executive Power To Appoint United States Attorneys Act of 2025 **What the Bill Would Do:** This bill would change how U.S. Attorneys are appointed. Currently, federal law requires the President to nominate U.S. Attorneys and the Senate to confirm them. This bill would allow the President to appoint U.S.
Attorneys directly without Senate confirmation, at least on a temporary or emergency basis. The specific mechanics aren't detailed in the available information, but the bill's title indicates it aims to give the President more independent power over these appointments. **Who It Affects:** U.S. Attorneys prosecute federal crimes in their districts and serve as the chief federal law enforcement officials in those areas. This bill would primarily affect the President's ability to staff these positions quickly, as well as the Senate's traditional "advice and consent" role in judicial and executive appointments. It could impact criminal justice operations across all federal districts nationwide. **Current Status:** The bill was introduced in the 119th Congress (2025) by Senator Mike Lee (R-Utah) and is currently in committee, meaning it has not yet been debated or voted on by the full Senate. No additional details about key provisions or amendment language are publicly available at this time.
Latest Action
Read twice and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.