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It’s Not Too Early to Ask: Who Should Replace Merrick Garland?

Should Kamala Harris win in November, her Attorney General pick will be among her most critical cabinet appointments.



Elie Mystal

Justice Correspondent & Columnist

The Nation



The Attorney General is the most important cabinet appointment made by a president. I know the media acts like the vice president is the crucial pick, and since that’s the only one we get to know about before the election, the VP choice is important for the presidential campaign. But once the votes are counted (if the Republican Supreme Court allows votes to be counted), it’s the AG who sets the tone for how law and justice will be administered in the new administration.


The choice is particularly crucial because the Attorney General is the official with the most independence from the White House. Pretty much everybody else in the cabinet works directly with the president, and implements the president’s agenda through the executive agencies they oversee. Not so with the AG: once the AG is confirmed by the Senate (and confirmation is apparently not even necessary if you are a Donald Trump pick), he or she has the authority to enforce the laws and bring cases separate and apart from the wishes of the president they nominally work for. The AG is supposed to investigate and prosecute crimes even if those crimes are committed by other members of the president’s government.


Think about it this way: there is rarely any distance between a president’s foreign policy and the Secretary of State’s foreign policy; nobody expects the Secretary of Transportation to announce new airline regulations without consulting the president; but everybody expects the Attorney General to take legal actions without checking in first with the president. And if the president (or even a presidential nominee’s spouse) so much as talks to the AG about an ongoing legal matter, that could be a scandal.



We know from reading Project 2025 that a second Trump administration aims to change all of this. As I’ve previously explained, the document explicitly calls for taking away the AG’s independence—a move that stems from Trump’s desire to use the Department of Justice to prosecute his political enemies.


We also know that, should Trump be re-installed, he plans to pick an Attorney General who will be loyal to him—and not the rule of law. Jeffrey Clark, last seen trying to help Trump steal the 2020 election with a fake electors plot, is one possible contender for AG. Texas Attorney General and inveterate xenophobe Ken Paxton has also been bandied about as a potential pick. Whoever Trump picks, we know they will be white, loyal, and fascist.

But what of Kamala Harris? People have paid a lot of attention to Harris’s time as a prosecutor and state attorney general, but there’s been less discussion about what kind of prosecutor she would appoint if elected. I would like to hope that Harris will not make the same mistake Joe Biden made when he selected Merrick Garland as Attorney General. In Garland, Biden picked a judge, not a prosecutor—and a judge with evidently no ambition higher than “restoring integrity” to the Department of Justice. That’s why Garland ended up being more concerned with the reputation of the DOJ than the zealous defense of the rule of law.


I have been keeping my ear to the ground, searching for signs that Harris will improve upon Garland and select an AG who is for the people instead of for the department. Here are the names of potential picks that are bubbling to the top.



Letitia JamesNew York attorney general

Tish James has already accomplished something Garland could not: She got a conviction against the Trump Organization for some of the financial crimes Trump committed. That alone makes her a strong contender to lead the Department of Justice.

James is a former public defender and New York City Council member who attended Howard University (Harris’s alma mater) for law school. She’s been the New York AG since 2019, and unlike the last guy to have her job (Eric Scheniderman), or the guy before that (Andrew Cuomo), or the guy before that (Eliot Spitzer), she has managed to avoid being mired in a gross sex scandal.

Perhaps the most important function of the New York AG’s office, when the office holder can keep it in their pants, is to serve as the chief regulator of the financial industry. It’s not an accident that James prosecuted The Trump Organization for financial crimes; that is literally her most important job. Getting “tough” on white collar crime is something the country could use.


James’s successful prosecution of Trump, however, means that she will have the roughest ride to Senate confirmation. Should Republicans lose the upcoming election, they will be apoplectic, and they might look to exact some measure of revenge against James. James can likely be confirmed only if Democrats maintain control of the Senate—and then don’t lose their nerve once back in power. 



Andrea CampbellMassachusetts attorney general

Andrea Campbell is a rising star in the Democratic party. She served as the first African-American president of the Boston City Council, lost a race to become mayor of Boston, but successfully ran to be Massachusetts’s attorney general in 2023.

Longtime readers will remember that briefly, during the summer of 2020, white people became momentarily interested in police reform. For a few weeks, the systemic brutality faced by Black people at the hands of unaccountable police forces gave white folks the sads. It didn’t last (as I predicted it wouldn’t in real time), but Campbell has never lost the plot. Her career, both on the city council and as AG, has been focused on police reform and accountability. As AG, she has established a number of new special “units” to focus on particular kinds of crime, including a police accountability unit, an elder care unit, and a reproductive rights unit. Campbell has also been an advocate for transgender rights, and she (along with Massachusetts governor Maura Healy) has promoted new guidelines for universities in the state to encourage diverse college admissions in the face of the Supreme Court’s 2023 decision declaring affirmative action unconstitutional.

Put simply: Campbell has an agenda that goes far beyond mere institutionalism. She is the kind of person who will use the full powers of her office to protect civil rights and civil liberties, and that is the kind of person we need at the DOJ given that we’ll still have a Republican-controlled Supreme Court committed to taking away those rights and liberties.

I don’t have to guess at how Republicans will view that agenda. But Campbell hasn’t prosecuted their savior in chief (yet), so she might be easier to confirm than other potential AG candidates.



Catherine Cortez Masto US senator, Nevada


Frankly, I was shocked to hear DOJ watchers bring up this name as a potential attorney general. Cortez Masto won reelection to the US Senate from Nevada in a razor thin election in 2022. The Democrats hold a slim majority in the Senate, so giving up one of those senators—and doing so in a state where the governor is a Republican—feels insane and self-defeating.

One potential reason she’s in the mix: Cortez Masto was one of Harris’s friends and allies when they were both serving as state attorneys general (Harris in California and Cortez Masto in Nevada) and when they were both in the senate, and Harris respects her greatly. But surely Harris can make a new friend who doesn’t hold a desperately needed Senate seat?

Still, Cortez Masto is extremely well qualified for the job. In addition to serving as Nevada’s AG, she’s also a former US Attorney and civil attorney in Las Vegas. Given the independence of the Attorney General that I’ve already mentioned, there is a lot of value in picking somebody you know well and trust. Cortez Masto is unlikely to “go rogue” on the Harris administration, nor is she likely to allow the Republicans still at the DOJ to continue to run amok, as Garland has. Based on her time in the Senate, she appears to be the kind of person who will respect the institution, but not be captured by it.

Cortez Masto could be a strong candidate for AG if the Democrats lose the Senate. She’s a moderate from a swing state who has built up relationships on both sides of the aisle. She’s one of the only potential AG appointments who would have a shot at surviving a Republican-controlled confirmation process… if for no other reason than that Republicans would likely jump at the chance to get her out of her seat in Nevada.

If you don’t like Senator Chuck Schumer’s dance moves, this is one sure way to ruin his mood. 



Jack Smith Special counsel for the Department of Justice


I do not think Jack Smith will be the next attorney general, but I have to include him on this list because so many people want him to be the next AG. In Smith, people have found the zealous, no-nonsense prosecutor they imagined Merrick Garland would be—and that they imagined Robert Mueller was before that. One can imagine Smith unironically quoting Kevin Bacon’s famous line from A Few Good Men: “I represent the government of the United States without passion or prejudice, and my client has a case.”

Appointing Smith as AG would also serve the function of being a master’s level troll of Trump, his co-conspirators, and the entire MAGA operation. Giving Smith the full powers of the Justice Department to pursue Trump and his cronies to the ends of the earth would be… satisfying.

But beware of AGs picked based on their potential to troll. People also thought that Garland would be the perfect AG candidate to stick it to Republicans after the way they treated him when he was nominated to the Supreme Court. It hasn’t turned out that way.

While Republicans would surely lose their minds if Harris nominated Smith, the fact is that none of us know anything about Smith’s politics. I don’t know where he stands on police brutality. I don’t know where he stands on corporate malfeasance and fraud. I don’t know if he’s a defender of environmental rights. I literally don’t know if the man supports reproductive rights or if he is willing to use the full measure of the law to defend them. AGs are not merely lawyers, they are policy makers, and I don’t know nearly enough about Smith’s policies.

All I know is that Smith was given one case and has done his job to the best of his ability. That’s neat, but I don’t break out the pom-poms just because a lawyer does their freaking job, even if that is an all too rare occurrence these days.



Kristen Clarke Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division at the United States Department of Justice


Kristen Clarke’s record as a champion of civil rights for all people in America is unassailable. She has dedicated her entire life and career to the pursuit of equal justice under the law.

Kristen began her career in the Civil Rights Division at the U.S. Department of Justice—the same office she has now leads.

Kristen Clarke is among the most qualified candidates ever nominated to lead civil rights enforcement for the nation. She has expertise on a wide range of key civil rights issues, including voting rights, hate crimes, human trafficking, disability rights, fair housing, education, employment, and police-community relations.


Kristen has earned a reputation for being pragmatic, a strong leader, and a consensus builder with a track record of achieving results.


She has a history of securing landmark agreements, working collaboratively with law enforcement to promote transparency and improved community relations, and engaging corporate leaders on issues of diversity and accountability. Her work has helped to strengthen these important American institutions while also serving communities deeply impacted by racial discrimination. Kristen is the first woman in history to be confirmed by the Senate to lead the Civil Rights Division at the Justice Department. While at the Justice Department, she served as a federal prosecutor in the Criminal Section of the Division, handling police misconduct, police brutality, hate crimes, and human trafficking cases. She also worked on voting rights and redistricting cases through the Division's Voting Section.



Doug Jones Former United States Attorney & Former United States senator from Alabama


Sen. Doug Jones is a distinguished senior fellow with American Progress, focusing his work on issues of racial justice and equality, voting rights, and law enforcement reform.

A celebrated prosecutor who brought long-overdue justice to the victims of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing, Sen. Jones has built his career on fighting impossible battles. In 2017, he shocked the political establishment by winning a special election to fill a U.S. Senate seat in Alabama—the first Democrat to do so in 25 years in the state. On Capitol Hill, he quickly built a reputation as a well-regarded and effective legislator, passing more than two dozen bipartisan bills into law in just three years. He also established the annual tradition of a bipartisan reading of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” in the Senate chamber and has been an outspoken Southern voice in support of racial justice and equity.

Sen. Jones has earned bipartisan praise from his fellow lawmakers as well as top awards from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the Military Officers Association of America, the National Rural Health Association, and more. He also serves a contributor for CNN and is a fellow at the Institute of Politics and Public Service at Georgetown University’s McCourt School of Public Policy.


The Democrats are blessed with a deep and impressive bench when it comes to potential attorneys general. The party has a roster of highly qualified and accomplished candidates, none of whom supported a failed coup d’état, all of whom respect the rule of law and the equal application of justice.

Should Harris win the election, her AG pick should be bold. Democrats have often sought compromise candidates for AG, or straight shooter lawyers unlikely to ruffle any feathers. That is the exact opposite of what Republicans do. Just look at who Republican presidents have appointed as AGs this century—people like Bill Barr, Jeff Sessions, Alberto Gonzales, and John Ashcroft, a murderers’ row of pro-death penalty, anti-choice, conservative culture warriors who are also authoritarian-curious. Republican presidents have used their AG picks to try to bring about massive social and cultural change through the apparatus of law, under the guise of justice.

Democrats should do the same. If you want to make nice with Republicans, do that with the Department of Agriculture. Throw the Republicans a bone with the Secretary of Commerce. The Attorney General should be the one cabinet position the party is willing to go to the mattresses over. If the Democrats hang onto the Senate, the ideal Harris AG would be confirmed with zero Republican votes. If Democrats lose the Senate, but Harris wins the presidency, her AG should be the most aggressive attorney Mitt Romney and Lisa Murkowski can stomach.



For many people, it is too early to start thinking about the Department of Justice. There’s still an election to win, and if Harris does win there will be the inevitable legal challenges and most likely violence unleashed by Trump to dispute that election. But I know the time to start organizing around the most important cabinet appointment is now, and I know that because of two words: Merrick Garland. That is a mistake that cannot happen again should Democrats win power this November.

Tim Walz came out of nowhere (no offense, Minnesota) to win the Veepstakes. If liberals organize and activate around a progressive AG choice, I have confidence that Harris and her team will listen. The Overton window can be shifted away from people like Garland and the world of cautious institutionalists—but the pushing has to start now.

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