THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 2012
Remember me:
Just Anticorruption
Cornyn: ‘I’m Willing To Go To The Mat’ For U.S. Attorney Pick
By Andrew Ramonas | May 14, 2010 6:13 pm

Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas) turned up the heat on Democrats for allegedly rejecting his candidate to lead the Northern District of Texas U.S. Attorney’s Office, The Dallas Morning News reported Friday.

John Cornyn (Getty images)

The Republican senator said the state’s Democrats are against the candidate he recommended for U.S. Attorney last October, Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah Saldana, because she handled the successful prosecution this year of former Dallas Mayor Pro tem Don Hill, a Democrat, on extortion and bribery charges.

“I’m willing to go to the mat [for Saldana],” Cornyn said, according to the newspaper.

Dallas County District Attorney Craig Watkins, a Democrat, rebuked Cornyn, saying no one is trying to chastise Saldana for her prosecution of Hill.

“Politically, it’s time to grow up,” Watkins said. “When you’re dealing with justice, politics shouldn’t come into the equation.”

The state’s House Democrats are submitting their own candidates for the four Texas U.S. Attorney posts. But the Democrats have yet to publicly announce a candidate for the Northern District.

Watkins said he would like the White House to tap his chief deputy, Terri Moore, for U.S. Attorney.

RELATED POSTS:

One Comment

  1. GiveMeLiberty says:

    Go to the mat, Cornyn! As a fellow Republican, President McCain should respect your choice. Oh, wait. Didn’t Obama win the election? Just STFU: Elections have consequences.

Attorney General Eric Holder pushes back against an aggressive Rep. Raul Labrador at a Feb. 2 House Oversight Committee hearing on the Fast and Furious gun-tracing operation. "What you have just done is disrespectful," Holder told the Idaho Republican.

"The legislative record of these provisions contains no rationale for providing veterans' benefits to opposite-sex spouses of veterans but not to legally married same-sex spouses of veterans." -- Attorney General Eric Holder in a letter to Congress explaining the DOJ's stance on federal benefits to married same-sex military personnel.