Albuquerque Journal

New Labor nominee wins praise

Acosta has held federal positions

- BY LAURIE KELLMAN AND KEN THOMAS

WASHINGTON — Seeking a surer bet to fill out his Cabinet, President Donald Trump on Thursday moved quickly to name law school dean Alexander Acosta as his new choice for labor secretary — a day after Andrew Puzder abruptly withdrew from considerat­ion.

If confirmed by the Senate, Acosta would be the first Hispanic member of Trump’s Cabinet.

Trump and key Republican­s highlighte­d a key detail in Acosta’s resume: He has won unanimous Senate confirmati­on three times — to a seat on the National Labor Relations Board, as the head of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and as U.S. attorney in Miami.

“He did very, very well,” Trump, said in a brief statement to start a White House press conference that was dominated by other challenges facing the new administra­tion. Acosta did not appear with him.

Almost immediatel­y, Acosta’s Senate prospects looked better than Puzder’s had after months of attacks on his personal life and career as a fast-food CEO.

“Mr. Acosta’s nomination is off to a good start because he’s already been confirmed by the Senate three times,” said Sen. Lamar Alexander, the chairman of the Senate panel that will hold Acosta’s confirmati­on hearing.

Leading Democrats and their allies vowed to hold Acosta “accountabl­e” as the head of an agency charged with enforcing worker protection­s.

But their reactions were muted compared to the scathing response to Puzder’s nomination in December, when his opponents paraded out worker after worker who complained of shoddy treatment at Puzder’s company’s restaurant­s, which include Hardee’s and Carl’s Jr. And they questioned how well Puzder could advocate for workers after a career atop CKE Restaurant­s Inc.

Puzder withdrew his nomination Wednesday after several Republican­s indicated they would not support him, in part over his past employment of a housekeepe­r not authorized to work in the U.S. Puzder did not pay the related taxes for five years, only doing so after he was nominated on Dec. 9.

“Unlike Andy Puzder, Alexander Acosta’s nomination deserves serious considerat­ion,” AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka said. “In one day, we’ve gone from a fast-food CEO who routinely violates labor law to a public servant with experience enforcing it.”

 ??  ?? Alexander Acosta
Alexander Acosta

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States