The Denver Post

Several unapproved Trump choices will have to be renominate­d for their posts in January

- By Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON» The Senate left town for the year without acting on dozens of President Donald Trump’s nominees, including his picks to head the Health and Human Services Department and NASA.

The Senate’s lack of action returns the nomination­s to the White House, which will have to renominate them in January if Trump wants them installed. Among the nominees in limbo are former pharmaceut­ical company executive Alex Azar to run Health and Human Services, Oklahoma Rep. Jim Bridenstin­e to head NASA and Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback for an ambassador’s post.

The nomination of KT McFarland, a former deputy national security adviser nominated as U.S. ambassador to Singapore, is in doubt amid questions about her communicat­ions with ex-national security adviser Michael Flynn.

A spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said nominees will be considered once they are resubmitte­d next year.

Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., blamed Democrats for using procedural tactics to slow up Trump nominees.

“We’ve got agencies all over this town that can’t answer a question because the bureaucrat­s are waiting on a Senate-confirmed individual to be able to lead that ... particular agency,” said Lankford, who has pushed to change Senate rules to streamline the confirmati­on process.

Too many nominees “sit and wait,” Lankford said Thursday in a speech on the Senate floor.

Democrats point out that the administra­tion has taken its time in submitting official paperwork to the Senate on the nominees and also has withdrawn a number of high-level appointees, including choices for Labor secretary, Army secretary and drug czar.

McConnell also has made judicial appointmen­ts a priority and Trump has gotten 19 confirmed, including 12 circuit judges, the most in a president’s first year in office in more than a century.

Under Senate rules, an appointee who has not received a confirmati­on vote by the end of the year must be nominated again unless senators agree unanimousl­y to carry the nomination into the new year. Dozens of nominees, including Azar, Bridenstin­e and Brownback, were not granted exemptions, meaning at least one senator objected.

Azar has been nominated to replace Tom Price, who resigned in September over questions about his use of private jets.

A former Eli Lilly and Co. executive, Azar served three years on the board of the Indianapol­is Airport Authority as it struggled to contain CEO John Clark III, who by some estimates racked up more than $200,000 in publicly funded travel.

Senators at Azar’s confirmati­on hearing last month focused on whether he is willing to stand up for consumers rather than “Big Pharma” as a former executive at the Indiana drug giant.

A Trump administra­tion official said Azar will be renominate­d early next month. The Senate Finance Committee will hold a hearing on the nomination, with a vote expected in a few weeks.

Sheryl Kaufman, a spokeswoma­n for Bridenstin­e, said the congressma­n is optimistic the Senate will move “expeditiou­sly” to confirm his nomination when it is refiled early next year.

A Senate committee narrowly backed Bridenstin­e last month. Democrats criticized past comments he made dismissive of global warming as a man-made problem. They also questioned whether he would keep the space agency from being mired in political battles.

Brownback faces opposition from Democrats and LGBT groups. In 2015, he rescinded an executive order banning discrimina­tion in state hiring and employment against gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgende­r individual­s. Brownback, a social conservati­ve, argued that the GOP-controlled Legislatur­e should sign off on such a policy.

Brownback told The Associated Press earlier this week that his nomination had taken “way too long, as have a number of nomination­s this year.” Other nominees being delayed include Kathleen Hartnett White, who has been named to lead the White House Council on Environmen­tal Quality, and Thomas Farr, a district court nominee whose work defending North Carolina’s redistrict­ing maps and a voter identifica­tion law has raised concerns among civil rights advocates.

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