The Day

Awaiting runoffs in Georgia, U. S. Senate and committees dwell in uncertaint­y

- By PAUL KANE

Washington — The presidenti­al transfer of power began last Monday when President Donald Trump allowed the incoming Biden administra­tion’s teams access to federal agencies, but another influentia­l transition will remain in limbo into the new year.

The Senate’s usual perfunctor­y task of approving an “organizing resolution,” creating new majority ratios on legislativ­e committees and installing new chairmen where necessary, remains on hold because of Georgia’s two runoff elections on Jan. 5.

Georgia’s election officials could take a few days, or even up to two weeks, to declare winners in the state’s two U. S. Senate races, given how close the presidenti­al contest and the two initial Senate ballots were. That means Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R- Ky., and Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D- N. Y., will be in a bit of a standoff until there is clarity about which side will hold the majority.

With no new resolution setting up the Senate committees, the panels will remain in their current form for however long it takes to sort out Georgia and then reach a compromise on the new makeup of committees. That freezes in place the expected game of musical chairs as at least nine committees are slated to have new Republican leadership next year — if the GOP keeps its majority.

And, effective at noon on Jan. 3, when this session of Congress ends, three committees will not have anyone to wield the gavel, as the current chairmen are retiring. Those headless committees will not be able to conduct any business or call confirmati­on hearings for Cabinet nominees or hold hearings on new legislatio­n, because only the chairmen can take such actions.

“Until the organizing resolution is done, they don’t have any authority to do anything,” said Marty Paone, who spent almost 30 years as a top parliament­ary adviser to Senate Democrats. “They couldn’t even buy paper.”

The oddest quirk will come on the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, where Sen. Lamar Alexander, R- Tenn., the chairman, is retiring, as are two other Republican­s on that committee, Sens. Mike Enzi of Wyoming and Pat Roberts of Kansas.

Until new senators are appointed to the panel, Democrats actually will hold a 10- 9 majority.

Sen. David Perdue, R- Ga., is in perhaps the most unusual situation of all — his six- year term ends at noon Jan. 3, two days before his runoff against Democrat Jon Ossoff.

If he ultimately defeats Ossoff, he will nonetheles­s have ceased to be a senator for a brief period.

So, at the start of the new Congress, McConnell will hold 51 seats vs. 48 for Schumer, as Perdue waits in limbo and an appointed senator, Kelly Loeffler, R- Ga., holds her seat until a winner is declared in her runoff against Democrat Raphael Warnock.

President- elect Joe Biden’s transition will continue without much disruption from the Senate’s continued state of uncertaint­y, although planning for the legislativ­e agenda will be slightly complicate­d by not knowing whether Democrats hold the majority in the House and Senate, or if Congress will remain divided.

Democrats need to win both Georgia races to deadlock at 5050, which would be only the second 50- 50 Senate since the expansion to 100 senators in 1959. Vice President- elect Kamala Harris, upon being sworn in on Jan. 20, would become president of the Senate and give Democrats the tie- breaking vote to have the majority and the committee gavels that come with it.

Even if Democrats win both Georgia seats, the Biden Cabinet confirmati­on process will begin with Republican­s in charge.

Tradition dictates that the Senate start processing Cabinet nominees in early January to tee up several to be confirmed in the afternoon a few hours after the new president is inaugurate­d, particular­ly those in critical national security positions.

On Jan. 20, 2017, the Senate confirmed Jim Mattis and John Kelly as secretarie­s of defense and homeland security, respective­ly, and held a procedural vote setting up Mike Pompeo’s confirmati­on as director of the CIA.

Paone, who is now a senior adviser at the Prime Policy Group, took part in the negotiatio­ns for Democrats the last time the Senate had a 50- 50 split, a similarly confused period of suspended Senate animation.

The Republican and Democratic leaders, Trent Lott, R- Miss., and Thomas Daschle, D- S. D., could not get to work on the organizing resolution until after the Supreme Court settled the presidenti­al election in mid- December, making clear that Lott would be majority leader once Richard B. Cheney was sworn in as vice president on Jan. 20, 2001.

Lott and Daschle settled things over a tense couple weeks of negotiatio­ns, eventually compromisi­ng on evenly divided committee rosters and special privileges for any legislatio­n that remained in a tie in committee.

The Senate passed the new committee lineups on Jan. 5, but that still left Democrats a brief window of holding the majority until Cheney was sworn in to replace then Vice President Al Gore.

Democrats ran the confirmati­on hearings and approved enough of the nominees in committee to set up 11 Cabinet posts for full confirmati­on in the hours immediatel­y following George W. Bush’s swearingin ceremony, including the new secretarie­s of defense, state, treasury, and health and human services.

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