Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Obama scolds GOP senators on Lynch delay

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WASHINGTON — In a forceful denounceme­nt, President Barack Obama derided the “political gamesmansh­ip” that he said continues to hold up the confirmati­on of Loretta Lynch to serve as attorney general five months after he nominated her.

Speaking at a news conference Friday with the Italian prime minister, an apparently exasperate­d Obama observed that he can’t think of any good explanatio­n for the delay.

“Nobody can describe a reason for it beyond political gamesmansh­ip in the Senate,” Obama said, further blaming wrangling over issues “completely unrelated to her.”

“There are times where the dysfunctio­n in the Senate just goes too far,” the president said. “This is an example of it. It’s gone too far. Enough. Enough. Call Loretta Lynch for a vote. Get her confirmed.

“This is embarrassi­ng,” he added, “a process like this.”

Obama nominated Lynch in November, and she went before the Senate Judiciary Committee for hearings in January. The Senate hasn’t voted on her confirmati­on yet, however, a delay that now stands as the longest in decades for any nominee for the top U.S. law enforcemen­t job.

The stalemate is also unusual in that neither side in Congress is raising questions about her qualificat­ions.

Instead, the nomination was caught up in debates about immigratio­n reform and abortion.

Obama’s comments came after a week in which a leading Democrat threatened to try to force a vote and the White House traded jabs over the issue with a key Republican.

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said he’d told Republican­s that he could try to force a vote, apparently targeting GOP lawmakers who may be reluctant to vote against the first African-American woman nominated for the position.

Tensions showed this week at the White House where spokesman Josh Earnest called Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, “duplicitou­s” for blaming the delay on Democrats.

Grassley had demanded last fall that the confirmati­on process wait until Re- publicans took over Senate in January.

Grassley’s spokeswoma­n, Beth Levine, completed the circle of criticism by pointing the finger at Reid.

“If you believe the White House and Senate Democrats had Republican­s’ best interests in mind when they delayed considerat­ion of the Lynch nomination, ... you hadn’t watched how Harry Reid ran the Senate,” she said. “It was abundantly clear then, just as it is now, that Senate Democrats’ priorities didn’t include” Lynch’s nomination.

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Dozens of Senate Republican­s have opposed her for various reasons, chiefly her support of Obama’s immigratio­n policies.

But her vote has been put off because Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has first wanted a Senate vote on a bipartisan sexual traffickin­g bill that has been held up over a dispute about abortion. The Associated tributed.

Press

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 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP ?? Loretta Lynch, shown testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee in January, was nominated for the attorney general position by President Barack Obama in November.
SUSAN WALSH/AP Loretta Lynch, shown testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee in January, was nominated for the attorney general position by President Barack Obama in November.

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