The Jerusalem Post

Trump’s pick for labor secretary admits he and wife employed illegal immigrant

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) – US President Donald Trump’s choice to lead the Labor Department has admitted to employing an undocument­ed immigrant as a house cleaner, a revelation that has derailed Cabinet nominees in previous administra­tions.

Andrew Pudzer, chief executive officer of CKE Restaurant­s Inc., is one of several Trump nominees who faced strong opposition from Senate Democrats and progressiv­e groups. He has criticized an overtime rule championed by the Obama administra­tion and opposed raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour.

In a statement late on Monday, Pudzer said he and his wife had employed a housekeepe­r for a few years without being aware that she was not legally permitted to work in the United States.

“When I learned of her status, we immediatel­y ended her employment and offered her assistance in getting legal status,” he said in the statement. Pudzer said he paid back taxes for employing the maid to the US Internal Revenue Service and to California. The statement was first reported by The Huffington Post.

The disclosure came as Senate Democrats held an all-night session in a final attempt to block the nomination of Betsy DeVos, the millionair­e school-choice champion whom Trump nominated to be education secretary.

Last week, an aide for the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions said the panel would not “officially” schedule a hearing on Pudzer until it receives his paperwork from the Office of Government Ethics.

Some political strategist­s said that could signal trouble for the fast-food executive.

Wilbur Ross, Trump’s pick for commerce secretary, said during his confirmati­on hearing last month that he recently fired a household employee who could not provide proof of legal status.

A Senate panel approved his nomination. However, previous presidenti­al appointees have run into problems over immigrant labor.

Linda Chavez, nominated for labor secretary in 2001 by Republican president George W. Bush, allowed a Guatemalan woman who was in the United States illegally to live in her home and gave her spending money.

Zoe Baird, Democratic president Bill Clinton’s nominee for attorney general in 1993, withdrew from considerat­ion after she admitted hiring two illegal immigrants as a driver and a nanny and not paying their Social Security taxes.

Another Bush nominee, former New York City police commission­er Bernard Kerik, withdrew his name from considerat­ion for homeland security secretary in 2004 after he disclosed that questions had been raised about the legal status of a former housekeepe­r and nanny.

 ?? (Wikimedia Commons) ?? ANDREW PUDZER
(Wikimedia Commons) ANDREW PUDZER

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