Enterprise-Record (Chico)

To navigate legal quandaries, Biden leans on low-key counsel

- By Aamer Madhani, Eric Tucker, and Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON » Election lawsuits multiplyin­g by the day. An obscure federal agency blocking the presidenti­al transition. The very legitimacy of Joe Biden’s victory under assault as supporters of Donald Trump riot at the Capitol.

Amid all the turmoil, lawyer Dana Remus was the voice of calm for Team Biden.

Fighting on multiple fronts as Biden’s top lawyer during the presidenti­al transition, Remus made a lasting impression on her colleagues with her ability to block out the noise as she battled legal challenges and pushed ahead with the screening of Cabinet and judicial nominees. Now, she’s the White House counsel.

“You could be in the middle of the hurly-burly and have a conversati­on with her, and the sort of atmospheri­c anxiety doesn’t get in the way of the legal issues that you’re dealing with,” recalled Andrew Wright, who worked with Remus during the transition. “She’s not panicky, which is always a good thing in a lawyer.”

Remus’s toughest task may lie ahead: guiding Biden as the White House supports efforts to investigat­e and hold accountabl­e those involved in the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on, while avoiding setting a precedent that could weaken the office of the presidency for generation­s to come.

Colleagues say the president would be hard-pressed to find a lawyer better suited for the moment.

Her office has helped Biden navigate legal decisions on pandemic policy, led the administra­tion’s effort to make more judicial nomination­s to this point than any president since Richard Nixon and offered advice on how the president’s adult son, Hunter Biden, can go about selling his paintings without creating conflicts of interest.

Before working for Biden, Remus, 46, spent years as a judicial and ethics expert in academia, and served as President Barack Obama’s chief ethics lawyer in the final 14 months of his presidency. Her stint as Biden’s general counsel during the 2020 election was her first campaign job.

“I think what her credential­s and her experience reflect is a clear determinat­ion by President Biden after the four-year, scandal-laden confuse-arama of the Trump administra­tion that he was going

to have a first-rate lawyer empowered with a strong background in ethics serve as his White House counsel,” White House chief of staff Ron Klain said.

The work of Remus and her deputies hasn’t gone without critique, including knocks on how the administra­tion went about extending a pandemic-era eviction moratorium even after the majority of Supreme Court justices signaled they would reject any additional extension

without authorizat­ion from Congress.

Republican­s and ethics lawyers also have pilloried the White House over the Hunter Biden artwork sale setup. Obama-era Office of Government Ethics chief Walter Schaub has called the art arrangemen­t “the perfect mechanism for funneling bribes” to the president.

The road ahead for Remus only gets more challengin­g as lawmakers investigat­ing the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on press

forward.

Biden has been asked to approve the early release of a vast swath of records from the Trump administra­tion, including some that detail the last administra­tion’s internal decision-making process, which is generally protected by executive privilege. Biden already has approved release of the first set of documents, a decision that Trump is in court trying to block.

Trump argues the records should be protected by Biden and the courts, and claims that allowing new presidents to open their predecesso­rs’ vaults so quickly would undermine the presidency. It’s a risk Biden is taking that could come back to haunt him in increasing­ly acrimoniou­s Washington, should his successor choose to release his papers early.

Biden, guided by Remus, has tried to preserve his ability to protect his own privilege, with an argument that the extraordin­ary circumstan­ces of Trump’s attempt to overturn the election results justified waiving the privilege.

Remus, in a letter this month calling for the National Archives to release internal Trump documents, underscore­d the request was made under “unique and extraordin­ary circumstan­ces” as “Congress is examining an assault on our Constituti­on and democratic institutio­ns.” She consulted with the Office of Legal Counsel at the Justice Department in preparing her advice for the president.

Neil Eggleston, White House counsel in the Obama administra­tion, believes Remus’ legal reasoning is sound. Still, he said the moment is a delicate one for the institutio­n of the presidency.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Assistant to the President and White House Counsel Dana Remus, left, and Assistant to the President and Deputy Chief of Staff Jen O’Malley Dillon, right, walk toward Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington.
ANDREW HARNIK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Assistant to the President and White House Counsel Dana Remus, left, and Assistant to the President and Deputy Chief of Staff Jen O’Malley Dillon, right, walk toward Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States