Trump officials oust Abigail Slater as DOJ's anti-trust chief, sources say
CBSN
Top Trump administration officials had decided to oust Justice Department anti-trust chief Abigail Slater and had discussions with her shortly before she announced on social media that she was leaving the department, sources told CBS News.
Top Trump administration officials had decided to oust Justice Department anti-trust chief Abigail Slater and had discussions with her shortly before she announced on social media that she was leaving the department, sources told CBS News.
Slater didn't cite a reason for her departure in her statement on X. She had lost the trust of Attorney General Pam Bondi and Assistant Attorney General Todd Blanche, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter.
In her post as assistant attorney general for anti-trust, she determined whether business merger deals would be approved or get derailed, and her every move was closely watched by the business community.
Trump officials believed Slater had undermined pending cases because of disagreements with leadership and had disobeyed requests, including to not embark on expensive travel to Europe and on other matters, two sources said. On one occasion, Slater angered Bondi when she traveled to a conference in Paris without Bondi's permission, prompting Bondi to cut off access to Slater's government credit cards, one source said.
Bondi in a statement to CBS News said: "On behalf of the Department of Justice, we thank Gail Slater for her service to the Antitrust Division which works to protect consumers, promote affordability, and expand economic opportunity."

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