The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Senate to push Trump picks, some unvetted

Democrats intend to slow process of confirmati­ons.

- Jennifer Steinhauer and Eric Lichtblau

Republican­s say they simply want to ensure the new president has a team in place as soon as possible.

As Senate Republican­s embark on a flurry of confirmati­on hearings this week, several of President-elect Donald Trump’s appointees have yet to complete the background checks and ethics clearances customaril­y required before the Senate begins to consider Cabinet-level nominees.

Republican­s, who are expected to hold up to five hearings on Wednesday alone, say they simply want to ensure the new president has a team in place as soon as possible.

“I believe all the president-elect’s Cabinet appointmen­ts will be confirmed,” said Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

But Democrats are calling for the process to be slowed and for the hearings to be spread out. That, they say, would allow more time to vet the nominees.

“Our first overarchin­g focus is getting tax returns and ethics forms,” said Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn.

In a letter to Sens. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., the head of the Office of Government Ethics, Walter M. Shaub Jr., said Friday that “the announced hearing schedule for several nominees who have not completed the ethics review process is of great concern to me.”

He said the packed schedule had put “undue pressure” on the office to rush its reviews of the nominees and he knew of no other occasion in the office’s four decades when the Senate had held a confirmati­on hearing before the review was completed.

Schumer responded Saturday by saying that the letter had made clear that the Trump transition team colluded with Senate Republican­s to “jam through” the nominees.

Several of the nominees are millionair­es or billionair­es and have vast webs of financial interests that must be untangled.

Richard W. Painter, a law professor at the University of Minnesota who served as chief ethics counsel to President George W. Bush, said he thought none of the nominees could receive a full vote on the Senate floor before the vetting was complete. Norman Eisen, Obama’s ethics counsel in his first term, said the paperwork delays were “totally unheard-of.”

The status of the background checks and ethical clearances can change by the day. Republican­s say they expect the missing documents to be submitted for all the nominees eventually.

The hearings are scheduled to begin Tuesday, with testimony from Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., the nominee for attorney general, and Gen. John F. Kelly, the pick for homeland security secretary. On Wednesday, the parade of nominees is expected to include Rex W. Tillerson, the choice for secretary of state; Betsy DeVos, the pick for education secretary; and Rep. Mike Pompeo, R-Kan., the nominee to lead the CIA.

Later in the week, the billionair­e investor Wilbur Ross, chosen as commerce secretary, and Andrew Puzder, the labor secretary pick, are scheduled to come before congressio­nal panels.

While some of Trump’s nominees — notably Rep. Tom Price, R-Ga., the choice for health secretary and an ardent opponent of the Affordable Care Act — are certain to receive hostile receptions from Democrats, large numbers of them will probably vote for many others.

Still, Democrats are preparing a furious assault against the nominees by going after the president-elect himself and trying to drive a wedge between them over his most incendiary promises, such as banning Muslim immigrants and bringing back torture.

“Where will they come down?” Schumer, the new Democratic leader, asked in an interview. “Will they try to persuade the president that’s the wrong way to take America?”

Democrats plan to keep the focus on the president-elect to a degree with few historical parallels. New presidents usually serve as a backdrop; this year, by contrast, Trump’s words will loom over the hearings as Democrats press the nominees to take a position on them.

Democrats have little chance of blocking any of the nominees, having given up the use of the filibuster in such cases when they were in the majority, but they say Trump has handed them ample political ammunition.

Sessions is certain to be asked whether, as attorney general, he would make good on Trump’s pledges to get a special counsel to “jail” Hillary Clinton over her use of a private email server while secretary of state.

Kelly can expect questions about whether he favors Trump’s call to build a wall on the Mexican border and to create a database on Muslims.

Pompeo is likely to be asked about his views on Trump’s support for waterboard­ing and his skepticism about the intelligen­ce agencies’ findings on Russian election meddling.

Tillerson will probably face a grilling over Trump’s vow to “cancel” the Paris climate accord.

Tillerson has spent hours trying to quietly assure lawmakers that he would take a more distant stance than Trump on Russian President Vladimir Putin, with whom Tillerson had close relations as the head of Exxon Mobil.

The Trump transition team, which did not comment on the background checks, is bracing its nominees for questions about the president-elect’s more controvers­ial positions, according to people with knowledge of the preparatio­ns. But officials would not say what tack the nominees would take in responding.

“I have no doubt that the president-elect and a number of his comments will come up,” said Sarah Isgur Flores, a spokeswoma­n for Sessions’ confirmati­on team. “But Sen. Sessions has a long record of service himself.”

Sessions will testify before the Judiciary Committee, which is generally friendly territory for sitting senators. But he is likely to face blistering questions from Democrats who are concerned about his civil rights record. In the 1980s, racially charged accusation­s derailed his nomination to a federal judgeship.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, said she would press Sessions to say where he stood on Trump’s pledges to have a special counsel further investigat­e Clinton’s emails.

“Hillary’s situation is done, and other than some kind of gross retributio­n, there’s no reason for that to even be something to look at,” Feinstein said in an interview.

By posing tough questions, said Sarah A. Binder, a political scholar at George Washington University, Democrats will try to lure the nominees into inflicting political damage on themselves by adopting some of Trump’s more divisive language.

Democrats intend to use all the procedural moves available to slow the process on the Senate floor, possibly spending up to 30 hours a nominee, denying Trump a full Cabinet when he takes office. Republican­s are indignant.

“Holding up confirmati­ons just for delay’s sake is irresponsi­ble and it is dangerous,” said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, adding, “Why in the world would we want to make it even more dangerous just to let our colleagues delay for delay’s sake President-elect Trump getting to fill his Cabinet, particular­ly these important national security offices?”

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 ?? AL DRAGO / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., Donald Trump’s nominee for U.S. attorney general, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Several Cabinet-level nominees have yet to complete the background checks and ethics clearances.
AL DRAGO / THE NEW YORK TIMES Sen. Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., Donald Trump’s nominee for U.S. attorney general, on Capitol Hill in Washington. Several Cabinet-level nominees have yet to complete the background checks and ethics clearances.
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