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Trump’s next White House counsel is ‘the exception to the rule’ of Trump lawyers

J.Wright33 min ago
As Donald Trump selects the top lawyers in his next administration, he has mostly prioritized loyalists who have forcefully advocated for him — either on cable news or in court.

His pick for White House counsel is a bit different. William McGinley, a longtime Republican election lawyer and K Street player, is not known as an outspoken Trump defender or a member of his legal inner circle.

That differentiates him from MAGA provocateur Matt Gaetz , whom Trump wants to be attorney general, and from the trio of Trump's personal lawyers who were tapped last week to fill other key positions at the Justice Department.

Instead, McGinley is an affable lawyer who doesn't make enemies and has little appetite for drama or the spotlight, his friends and colleagues say.

"This makes the McGinley pick the exception to the rule," said fellow longtime GOP election lawyer Jan Baran. "He's not a publicity hound."

But when Trump returns to the Oval Office, McGinley will be thrust into the high-profile and delicate role of a close legal adviser to a president who often cares little about the boundaries of the law. The two men who served as White House counsel in Trump's first term, Don McGahn and Pat Cipollone, ended up on the outs with Trump after they resisted Trump plans they considered illegal or unwise.

One of McGinley's most important duties in the role — which does not require Senate confirmation — will be to serve as the liaison to the Justice Department, which is sure to be a hotbed of controversy even if Gaetz fails to win Senate confirmation. Trump has repeatedly suggested he wants the department to prosecute his many enemies , and he and his allies are poised to wipe away the traditional layer of separation that has allowed the department to operate somewhat independently from the White House.

But McGinley has experience navigating the tumult of a Trump administration. In Trump's first term, he served in the relatively obscure role of White House Cabinet secretary — a position that made him a primary contact between the president and the various Cabinet departments.

During his tenure, McGinley managed one of the most impressive feats in Washington: He survived more than two years in the Trump White House without sullying his own reputation and without a major blow-up with Trump.

Asked how McGinley did it, McGahn joked: "I should maybe ask him what the secret was."

McGinley did not respond to a request for comment for this .

A scrappy intellectual with deep roots in GOP politics While McGinley isn't personally a fixture on cable news, he is a protege of a Trump-friendly, contrarian legal pundit who is a regular presence there: Jonathan Turley. In fact, Turley was one of McGinley's first professors more than two decades ago at George Washington University Law School.

"He has an advanced degree in history ... but he's not a lace-curtain lawyer," Turley said of McGinley, who attended UCLA as an undergraduate and later got a master's in history from California State University, Long Beach. "He's an intellectual who knows how to scrap and that's not a bad profile in a White House counsel."

The fact that McGinley is a creature of Washington also helps, Turley added.

"Washington, D.C., is a unique place," he said. "You really want someone who has been immersed in practice in Washington, D.C."

McGinley has two decades of immersion, dealing mainly with election law and representing Republican politicians or political entities.

"He can really see the intersection of law and policy and politics," said McGahn, who called him "a great lawyer."

In the most recent presidential campaign, McGinley served as outside counsel to the Republican National Committee's "election integrity" efforts. Prior to joining the Trump White House, McGinley worked as counsel to the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

For many years, McGinley worked alongside former RNC counsel Ben Ginsberg. At law firms Patton Boggs and later Jones Day, the pair advised Republican candidates on campaign finance and election issues.

One of McGinley's highest profile assignments came in the 2008 election, which led to a recount that pitted incumbent GOP Sen. Norm Coleman against Al Franken. Battling over the vote tally stretched for nearly eight months, with Coleman conceding in June 2009 after the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled Franken the winner by 312 votes out of 2.9 million cast.

In recent years, McGinley has taken on some fights closer to home. Last year, he advised a Virginia Republican, Bob Anderson, in a challenge to the incumbent Democratic State Attorney Buta Biberaj. Anderson ultimately defeated Biberaj by 300 votes in a battle that came down to provisional ballots.

Friends describe McGinley as a devout Catholic with a reputation for truth-telling.

McGinley, 57, has two children studying at the University of Alabama. As a result, associates say, he's now a big fan of Alabama football and has recently become acquainted with the contentious sorority pledge ritual there immortalized in the TV series, "'Bama Rush."

A low-profile lobbying practice on top of GOP work McGinley joined the first Trump White House on Day 1 and served for 2 1/2 years before leaving to return to private practice. Since then, he has worked as a federally registered lobbyist alongside his legal practice.

His clients have included defense contractor Vectrus, a New England fishermen's group, and Max Schachter, a school safety advocate whose son was killed in the mass shooting at a Parkland, Florida, high school in 2018, federal filings show.

Until March of this year, McGinley served as a lobbyist for two Russian-born, U.S.-educated software tycoons, Andrei Baronov and Ratmir Timashev. Both men are reported to be billionaires and under sanctions by Ukraine's government.

Lobbying disclosures indicate McGinley's work was related to "business operations and humanitarian efforts in Ukraine." Baronov and Timashev were placed on a Ukrainian sanctions list in 2022. They reportedly renounced their Russian citizenship in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine earlier that year.

Returning to the White House, no longer under the radar Now, as McGinley prepares to return to a Trump White House in a more prominent role, it will be more difficult, if not impossible, for the drama-averse lawyer to avoid controversy and the spotlight.

McGinley may have survived the first Trump administration relatively unscathed because he wasn't in the White House counsel's office, where he would have been involved in the most contentious issues. Instead, his duties as Cabinet secretary involved supervising the paper flow between the West Wing and federal agencies.

"His position, at least in that role early on ... was largely under the radar, and I don't believe he had much interaction with the president or other key figures there at the White House on major policy and legal issues," said one Trump administration official who dealt with him there and was granted anonymity to discuss sensitive personnel issues.

McGahn described McGinley's remit somewhat differently, but acknowledged his colleague's involvement in legal issues during the first Trump term was limited.

"Occasionally, we were attending the same meetings trying to assure legal alignment. So he certainly knows where the bathroom is and knows how the Cabinet works and knows how policy is made," McGahn said. "I think that's going to help him as counsel, because he's kind of aware of the difference between the policy side, the lawyer side, and the intangible of the political-climate side."

Ukraine said Tuesday that its forces would never surrender to Russia, 1,000 days after Moscow launched its brutal invasion, while the Kremlin also pledged victory and escalated its nuclear sabre-rattling.The grim anniversary opened with an overnight Russian strike in the eastern Ukrainian region of Sumy that gutted a Soviet-era resident building and killed at least nine people, including a child.President Volodymyr Zelensky published images of rescue workers hauling bodies from the debris and called on Kyiv's allies to "force" the Kremlin into peace.The foreign ministry echoed Zelensky's comments in a statement marking the anniversary by calling on allies to ramp up their military support to bring about a "sustainable" end to the war."Ukraine will never submit to the occupiers, and the Russian military will be punished for violating international law," the ministry said."We need peace through strength, not appeasement," the ministry added, referring to growing calls for Ukraine to sit down at the negotiating table with Russia to end the war.The Kremlin also vowed to defeat Ukraine."The military operation against Kyiv continues ... and will be completed," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, using Russia's preferred language for its invasion.The comments came as Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree broadening the scope for when Moscow will consider using nuclear weapons in a clear warning to the West and Ukraine.- Deadly dorm strike -The Kremlin says the move, which enables Russia to use nuclear weapons against a non-nuclear state if they are supported by nuclear powers, was "necessary to bring our principles in line with the current situation."It comes just after the United States gave Kyiv permission to use long-range missiles to strike military targets inside Russia.  The EU's outgoing top diplomat Josep Borrell pressed member states Tuesday to align with Washington in allowing Kyiv to strike inside Russia using donated long-range missiles.A Russian attack in Sumy hit a dormitory in the town of Glukhiv, which had a pre-war population around 30,000 people and lies just 10 kilometres (six miles) from the Kursk region in Russia, where Ukrainian troops captured swathes of territory after launching a major ground offensive in August.The drone attack killed nine people including a child, the emergency services said, adding that four people were likely under the rubble.In total, Kyiv said that Russia had launched 87 drones over Ukraine during the night, and that 51 were shot down.The strike on Sumy comes just days after another Russian aerial bombardment in the border region killed 12 people and wounded 84.- 'Chronic' Russian violations -A separate missile strike on Monday on the UNESCO-protected city of Odesa in southern Ukraine left 10 dead and 55 wounded.Ukrainian forces have steadily been losing ground in the Kursk region and have warned that Russia has amassed a force of some 50,000 troops, including North Korean forces, to wrest back the region.The anniversary of Russia's invasion - launched on February 24, 2022 - comes at a perilous time for Ukrainian forces across the front, particularly near the war-battered cities of Kupiansk and Pokrovsk.Ukraine has accused Russian forces of deploying banned chemical substances to advance and on Tuesday urged its allies respond to a report by the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) watchdog that said it had found banned riot control gas in Ukrainian soil samples from the front line."Russia's use of banned chemicals on the battlefield once again demonstrates Russia's chronic disregard for international law," the foreign ministry said.bur-jbr/brw/ach 

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