The Niagara Falls Review

Flake blocks Trump’s judicial nominees in bid to help Mueller

- KAROUN DEMIRJIAN

WASHINGTON— Arizona Republican Sen. Jeff Flake said Wednesday that he would not vote for any more of President Donald Trump’s judicial nominees until the Senate votes on a bill to prevent Special Counsel Robert Mueller from being fired — a pledge that could complicate Republican­s’ hope to confirm dozens of conservati­ve judges before the end of the year.

Flake’s warning will likely force Republican­s to rely on Vice President Mike Pence to confirm any of the 32 judicial nominees pending before the full Senate, as panel Democrats are unlikely to vote for those who Flake has committed to oppose. It also means that Republican­s will likely have to go around the Senate Judiciary Committee, where the GOP has only a one-seat majority, to advance any of the 21 nominees waiting for that panel’s endorsemen­t. That also will require Pence’s tiebreakin­g vote.

Flake issued his threat after Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., blocked Flake and Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., from holding a vote on the bill, which would give any fired special counsel the ability to swiftly challenge their terminatio­n before a panel of three federal judges. Most Republican­s — including co-authors Sens. Thom Tillis, R-N. C., and Lindsey Graham, R-S. C., have argued that the bill is unnecessar­y because Trump would never dare fire Mueller, whose ongoing probe of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election has sought to learn whether anyone in Trump’s campaign conspired with those efforts.

Flake challenged that, given Trump’s decision to appoint Matthew Whitaker as acting attorney general with oversight of the Mueller probe. Whitaker has made past statements that are critical of the investigat­ion. Flake said he believes Whitaker should recuse himself from the Russia probe, letting deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein reassume authority over it.

“The president now has this investigat­ion in his sights and we all know it,” he said on the Senate floor Wednesday.

“You use what leverage you have,” he added later, explaining why he made his threat to block judges to force a vote on the legislatio­n. “This is a priority now.”

Flake is retiring at the end of the year, at which point his threat to block judges from being confirmed will no longer complicate the confirmati­on process. But he and Coons hope to convince other Republican­s to join their effort. If one more Republican does, they and the Democrats could prevent Trump from getting any of his judicial nominees confirmed in 2018 — a move Flake guessed would send a message about the special counsel bill.

“We are confident (the bill) would get 60 votes if given a vote,” Coons told reporters. “It is time for us to move from speech to action.”

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