Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Tillerson clears hurdle, on track for confirmati­on

- By Richard Lardner

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s nomination of Rex Tillerson for secretary of state cleared a Senate hurdle Monday, setting the stage for an extended debate over the president’s order banning travel from specific Muslim-majority countries and U.S. policy toward Russia.

Senators voted 56-43 to put Tillerson’s bid to be the nation’s chief diplomat on track for confirmati­on later this week. Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., pressed unsuccessf­ully for a delay in the vote until Tillerson answered for Trump’s travel ban order.

Trump’s order bars individual­s from seven Muslimmajo­rity countries from entering the U.S. for 90 days. Trump has repeatedly said the move is aimed at protecting the nation against extremists looking to attack Rex Tillerson appears likely to retain strong Republican support for confirmati­on as secretary of state. Americans and American interests. But recent domestic acts of deadly extremist violence have been carried out either by U.S. citizens or by individual­s whose families weren’t from the nations singled out.

Although many Democrats — including Schumer — will oppose Tillerson, they’ll need at least several Republican­s to join them to derail the nomination. That appeared unlikely, even after two of the Senate’s leading Republican voices on national security voiced concern over Trump’s desire for a better relationsh­ip with Moscow.

Sens. John McCain of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina also criticized Trump’s travel ban order and his failure to consult with key federal agencies, including the department­s of Justice and Homeland Security.

“We fear this executive order will become a selfinflic­ted wound in the fight against terrorism,” McCain and Graham said. That elicited an angry tweet from Trump, who called the two GOP senators “weak on immigratio­n” and accused them of “looking to start World War III.”

Whether Trump intends to lift U.S. sanctions against Russia will likely be another major theme in the Senate debate over Tillerson’s nomination, which is restricted to no more than 30 hours after Monday’s vote. The president last week was noncommitt­al, telling reporters at a news conference: “We’ll see what happens. As far as the sanctions, very early to be talking about that.”

But Democrats have doubted Tillerson’s willingnes­s to be tough with Russia. Sen. Ben Cardin of Maryland, the top Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, said responses to questions about sanctions against Moscow sounded more like a corporate executive instead of a prospectiv­e secretary of state.

McCain, the chairman of the Armed Services Committee, and Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, a member of the Foreign Relations Committee, last week warned the White House about easing any punishment­s on Moscow and vowed to turn the sanctions into law.

U.S. intelligen­ce officials have concluded that Moscow meddled in the 2016 election to help Trump become president.

Obama in late December ordered sanctions on Russian spy agencies, closed two Russian compounds and expelled 35 officials the U.S. said were really spies. The new penalties add to existing U.S. sanctions, which have damaged Russia’s economy but had limited impact on Putin’s behavior.

Sen. Joe Manchin, DW.Va., said last week he would support Tillerson. Manchin, who faces reelection in 2018 in a state that backed Trump heavily in the presidenti­al election, said the former Exxon Mobil CEO’s business career “will bring a unique perspectiv­e to the State Department.”

Separately, two Senate panels postponed votes scheduled for late Monday on two other Trump nomination­s — Steve Mnuchin to be treasury secretary and Linda McMahon, the former wrestling entertainm­ent executive, to lead the Small Business Administra­tion — because the time conflicted with a Democratic protest of Trump’s immigratio­n order in front of the Supreme Court.

The delays were temporary, with votes expected Tuesday.

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