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Merrick Garland's appointment of special counsel Robert Hur to investigate the burgeoning Biden documents problem tells us something new about the attorney general.
Notwithstanding his image as a "just the facts and law" prosecutor, Garland, it appears, may factor into key high-profile decisions, political considerations and the importance of public confidence in the Justice Department's evenhandedness.
No surprise, one might say. But until now, Garland has maintained and burnished a reputation as a wholeheartedly apolitical attorney general, indifferent to the consequences of his actions on the other branches and the public.
Indeed, even as he turned over to Jack Smith the oversight role in the Justice Department's investigations of former President Donald Trump, Garland pointedly invoked the letter of the law, the "extraordinary circumstances" that required the appointment of a special counsel.
As the President Joe Biden documents surfaced this week — a small number, including classified documents, found in two places — the near-unanimous assessment of commentators has been that Garland had "no choice" but to appoint a special counsel in the matter.
But that's not what the law says. The Justice Department regulation calls for a special counsel to be appointed only "when the attorney general determines that a criminal investigation of a person or matter is warranted" and that "the investigation … would present a conflict of interest for the department, or other extraordinary circumstances."