Imperial Valley Press

Former senator to replace McCain, at least until January

- BY MELISSA DANIELS

PHOENIX (AP) — A former U.S. senator from Arizona who is now a lobbyist helping guide the confirmati­on of U.S. Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh was named Tuesday to temporaril­y fill the Senate seat left open by the death of John McCain.

Republican Jon Kyl cited his sense of duty in accepting the appointmen­t but said he’s only committing to serve until the end of the congressio­nal session next Jan. 3.

Despite the short window, Kyl will likely be able to vote for Kavanaugh as the Supreme Court nominee.

Kyl, 76, retired from the Senate after three terms in 2012 and became a lobbyist. He said he had wanted to spend more time with his family in Arizona but will reluctantl­y return to Washington to help finish the nation’s business, including confirming the president’s judicial nominees.

“I’m putting my country first, just as this seat’s previous occupant did every single day for more than 30 years,” Kyl said of McCain.

Kyl, an attorney, was appointed by Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey, a fellow Republican who called him the best person for the job “regardless of politics” and said he hopes Kyl stays in the post longer.

President Donald Trump tweeted: “Jon Kyl will be an extraordin­ary senator representi­ng an extraordin­ary state, Arizona. I look forward to working with him.”

Kyl was a reliable Republican vote during his time in the Senate — in contrast to McCain’s occasional defiance of party leaders — and his arrival will be welcome to a GOP that has struggled with a narrow, single-vote majority while McCain was treated for the brain cancer that killed him on Aug. 25.

Voters will decide who they want in the seat in 2020, when they elect someone to serve the rest of McCain’s term. The seat will come up again for a six-year term in 2022.

If Kyl does leave the Senate in January, Arizona’s governor can appoint another person for the remaining year.

In the coming months, Kyl will have the opportunit­y to vote on several issues that have been involved in his lobbying activities, from immigratio­n to national security.

He has lobbied on behalf of young immigrants brought to the U.S. illegally as children, often called Dreamers, whose fate is in limbo after Trump tried to end an Obama-era program protecting them from deportatio­n and Congress deadlocked on a solution.

Kyl will likely also vote on bills containing tens of billions of dollars for Defense Department programs after he represente­d defense giant Northrop Grumman.

His work there was primarily focused on tax issues affecting the company, but Kyl’s firm, Covington & Burling, also lobbied the House and Senate to drum up support for the B-21 bomber, a stealth aircraft Northrop Grumman is building for the Air Force.

Kyl is well-respected in Arizona and has been able to avoid many of the battles with activists that complicate­d McCain’s career and that of the state’s other senator, Jeff Flake, who is retiring because his feud with Trump made his re-election impossible.

Kyl’s entire career in Washington overlapped with McCain’s, and he served with the state’s senior senator for three terms before stepping down. Kyl carved out a profile as a foreign policy expert.

McCain’s widow, Cindy, tweeted: “Jon Kyl is a dear friend of mine and John’s.

 ??  ?? in this 2012, file photo, senate minority whip Jon Kyl, r-Ariz., walks between the senate chamber and the office of senate minority Leader mitch mcConnell, r-Ky., in washington. AP PhOTO/J. ScOTT APPlEWhITE
in this 2012, file photo, senate minority whip Jon Kyl, r-Ariz., walks between the senate chamber and the office of senate minority Leader mitch mcConnell, r-Ky., in washington. AP PhOTO/J. ScOTT APPlEWhITE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States