President-elect Donald Trump is offering the post of attorney general to Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions, one of the Trump's closest and most consistent allies.
That's according to a senior Trump official, who was not authorized to speak publicly about the conversation.
The official on Friday wouldn't say whether Sessions had accepted the job, which left open the possibility that the arrangement was not finalized.
Sessions was the first senator to endorse Trump and was a close adviser throughout the campaign.
Trump released a statement Thursday after a meeting with the senator saying he was "unbelievably impressed" with Sessions.
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The Alabama Republican previously struggled with a Senate confirmation hearing when he was nominated for a federal judgeship in 1986. He was dogged by racist comments he was accused of making while serving as U.S. attorney in Alabama.
He later withdrew from consideration for the post.
Mike Pompeo picked for CIA director
Trump has picked Mike Pompeo — a Kansas congressman — to be CIA director.
That's according to a Trump transition official.
Pompeo is a conservative Republican and a fierce critic of President Barack Obama's nuclear deal with Iran.
Trump is beginning to fill out his governing team, and the transition official says Trump will make the Pompeo announcement on Friday morning, along with his nomination of Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions to be attorney general and his selection of retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn to be national security adviser.
The official wasn't authorized to disclose the decisions ahead of Trump's announcement and insisted on anonymity.
Trump offers Michael Flynn position of national security advisor
Trump is offering former military intelligence chief Michael Flynn the position of national security adviser, elevating a fierce critic of current U.S. foreign policy into a crucial White House role.
Flynn's selection amounts to Trump's first signal to allies and adversaries about the course he could take in office. It's unclear whether Flynn, a retired Army general, has accepted the job, though a senior transition official confirmed Thursday that the president-elect has made the offer. The official was not authorized to discuss the offer publicly and insisted on anonymity.
Flynn was a fierce critic of President Barack Obama's military and foreign policy long before he began advising Trump on national security issues during the presidential campaign. While the position of national security adviser doesn't require Senate confirmation, Flynn would work in the West Wing and have frequent access to the president.
Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.