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Senate Democrats Delay Confirmation of Mnuchin and Price – New York Times


New York Times
Senate Democrats Delay Confirmation of Mnuchin and Price
New York Times
The Senate Finance Committee's room was empty after Democrats boycotted votes on Tuesday for Representative Tom Price as secretary of health and human services and Steven T. Mnuchin as Treasury secretary. Credit Gabriella Demczuk for The New ...
Democrats block confirmation votes for Sessions, Price and MnuchinWashington Post
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Senate Democrats Delay Confirmation of Mnuchin and Price - New York Times

Democrats Skip Votes, Delaying Confirmation of Trump Nominees – New York Times


New York Times
Democrats Skip Votes, Delaying Confirmation of Trump Nominees
New York Times
The Senate Finance Committee's room was empty after Democrats boycotted confirmation votes on Tuesday for Representative Tom Price as secretary of health and human services and Steven Mnuchin as Treasury secretary. Credit Gabriella Demczuk for ...
Senate Democrats Block Committee Votes On 2 Trump NomineesNPR
Democrats boycott confirmation hearings for Price and Mnuchin, blocking votesWashington Post
Senate Democrats boycotting HHS, Treasury nomineesCNN
Chicago Tribune -ABC News -Bloomberg -Columbus Dispatch
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Democrats Skip Votes, Delaying Confirmation of Trump Nominees - New York Times

Trump to name US high court pick on Tuesday as Democrats plan fight – Reuters

By Lawrence Hurley | WASHINGTON

WASHINGTON President Donald Trump was set to unveil his pick for a lifetime job on the U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday as Democrats, still fuming over the Republican-led Senate's refusal to act on former President Barack Obama's nominee last year, girded for a fight.

Trump has announced he would reveal his choice to replace conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, who died last February, at the White House at 8 p.m. (0100 GMT on Wednesday).

The court is ideologically split with four conservative justices and four liberals, and Trump's pick can restore its conservative majority.

A source involved in the selection process said Trump has made his choice between two conservative U.S. appeals court judges - Neil Gorsuch and Thomas Hardiman. Both were appointed to the bench by Republican former President George W. Bush.

CNN, citing an unnamed source, said Gorsuch, a judge on the Denver-based 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, has been told he is the likely nominee.

Adding an element of drama to what is normally a sober announcement, CNN said both Gorsuch and Hardiman, who serves on the Philadelphia-based 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, had been brought to Washington ahead of Tuesday's announcement.

A senior Senate Republican aide said Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has already been informed of Trump's pick, which the senator described as an "outstanding choice."

William Pryor, a judge on the Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, had earlier been mentioned as a possible nominee.

Under the Constitution, a president's Supreme Court nomination requires Senate confirmation.

A Supreme Court justice can have influence for decades after the president who made the appointment has left office and Trump's appointee could be pivotal in cases involving abortion, gun, religious and transgender rights, the death penalty and other contentious matters.

White House spokesman Sean Spicer said polls had shown that the composition of the Supreme Court was important for many voters at last year's presidential election.

I can assure you that this individual will make those voters and every American very, very proud," Spicer told reporters. "This particular choice is one the president takes very seriously."

CONSERVATIVE CREDENTIALS

William Pryor, a judge on the Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, had earlier been mentioned as a possible Trump nominee.

All three men have strong conservative credentials.

Gorsuch, 49, joined an opinion in 2013 saying that owners of private companies can object on religious grounds to a provision of the Obamacare health insurance law requiring employers to provide coverage for birth control for women.

Hardiman, 51, has embraced a broad interpretation of the constitutional guarantee of the right to bear arms and has backed the right of schools to restrict student speech.

Pryor, 54, has been an outspoken critic of the court's 1973 landmark Roe v. Wade ruling legalizing abortion, calling it "the worst abomination of constitutional law in our history."

Amid partisan tension since Trump took office, Democrats remain enraged because Republican Leader McConnell refused last year to allow the Senate to consider Obama's nomination of Judge Merrick Garland for the vacant seat. That action has little precedent in U.S. history.

Gambling that Republicans would win the presidency in the Nov. 8 election, McConnell argued that Obama's successor should get to make the pick. The move paid off with Trump's victory, but the court has run shorthanded for nearly a full year.

Some Democrats have said the Republicans effectively stole a Supreme Court seat from Obama by refusing to confirm Garland.

Democratic Senator Jeff Merkley has vowed to pursue a procedural hurdle called a filibuster for Trump's nominee, meaning 60 votes would be needed in the 100-seat Senate unless its long-standing rules are changed. Trump's fellow Republicans hold a 52-48 majority, meaning some Democratic votes would be needed to confirm his pick.

"We need to fight this Constitution-shredding gambit with everything we've got," Merkley said in a statement.

McConnell on Monday warned Democrats that senators should respect Trump's election victory and give the nominee "careful consideration followed by an up-or-down vote," not a filibuster.

Trump, who took office on Jan. 20, said last week he would favor Senate Republicans eliminating the filibuster, a change dubbed the "nuclear option," for Supreme Court nominees if Democrats block his pick.

Judicial Crisis Network, a conservative legal advocacy group, said it would launch the first part of a $10 million media advertisement campaign on Tuesday night in favor of whomever Trump chooses. The effort will hold Senate Democrats who face election in 2018 "accountable for their choice" on the Supreme Court, the group said.

Since it had only eight members after Scalia's death, the court has steered clear of some controversial issues. The most high-profile case currently under consideration is that of a female-born transgender high school student named Gavin Grimm, who identifies as male. He sued in 2015 to win the right to use the school's boys' bathroom in Virginia.

Depending on how quickly Trump's nominee is confirmed by the Senate, he may be able to participate in some of the current terms cases. If not, the court may have to consider setting new oral arguments and deciding them at a later date.

(Additional reporting by Andrew Chung, Richard Cowan, Susan Heavey, Ayesha Rascoe and Doina Chiacu; Writing by Will Dunham and Alistair Bell; Editing by Susan Heavey and Bill Trott)

SAN FRANCISCO San Francisco filed a lawsuit on Tuesday challenging President Donald Trump's executive order directing the U.S. government to withhold money from cities that have adopted sanctuary policies toward undocumented immigrants.

WASHINGTON U.S. Senate Democrats on Tuesday boycotted a planned committee vote on two of President Donald Trump's Cabinet nominees, Steve Mnuchin to be Treasury secretary and Tom Price to head the Health and Human Services department, postponing the vote.

WASHINGTON Nationals from the seven Muslim-majority countries temporarily blocked from entering the United States by President Donald Trump's executive order on immigration may not be granted admission any time soon, Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly said on Tuesday.

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Trump to name US high court pick on Tuesday as Democrats plan fight - Reuters

Sessions vote delayed as Democrats blast Yates firing – Politico

That is what an attorney general must be willing and able to do, California Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, said of Sally Yates. | Getty

Democrats use the furor over Trump's dismissal of the acting attorney general to drag out committee vote for Sessions.

By Seung Min Kim

01/31/17 10:58 AM EST

Updated 01/31/17 02:07 PM EST

The already contentious battle over confirming Jeff Sessions as attorney general blew up further on Tuesday as Democrats used the surprise firing of Sally Yates as acting head of the Justice Department to argue that Sessions wont be sufficiently independent from President Donald Trump.

And Democrats successfully dragged out the Sessions debate long enough that his committee vote got kicked to Wednesday. His eventual confirmation is not in doubt given that he has support from all Republicans and at least one moderate Senate Democrat, but Democrats are using every lever they have to make his nomination fight as painful as possible.

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But for Democrats who, for weeks, have raised questions about Sessions ability to be an independent attorney general, Yates dramatic firing late Monday gave even more fodder on whether Sessions could be a check on a president who Democrats warn is already pushing the bounds of executive power.

That is what an attorney general must be willing and able to do, California Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, said of Yates. I have no confidence Sen. Sessions will do that. Instead he has been the fiercest, most dedicated and most loyal promoter in Congress of the Trump agenda.

Despite requests from Republicans to keep their comments short, each Democrat on the Judiciary Committee launched into lengthy speeches criticizing Sessions' record and ties to Trump. The debate went on for so long that Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) said the panel vote would slip to Wednesday, as Democrats prepared to invoke a rarely-used rule that committees cannot meet beyond two hours after coming into session. The Senate came into session at noon on Tuesday.

The Sessions' committee vote will be Wednesday at 10:30 a.m.

Yates, a holdover from the Obama administration, was unceremoniously fired Monday after she announced that she would instruct Justice Department lawyers not to defend Trumps controversial executive order barring immigrants from some Muslim-majority nations.

The directive has already triggered mass protests and confusion at airports, as well as a stream of legal challenges and court losses for the Trump administration. The executive order is also sure to play a starring role in the confirmation fight over Trumps Supreme Court nominee, who will be unveiled Tuesday.

Republicans sought to inoculate Sessions from the controversy brewing over Trumps executive order, noting at the outset of the hearing Tuesday that the Alabama Republican Trumps chief supporter from the Senate during the campaign had no fingerprints in the controversial directives.

Its not clear to me why it would be a problem even if he had been involved, Grassley said. But the fact of the matter is he wasnt.

In written responses to Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), Sessions said neither he nor his current aides were involved in drafting the series of executive orders on immigration that were rolled out last week.

Leahy delivered a lengthy indictment of Trumps dismissal of Yates on Tuesday, slamming the president for firing an acting attorney general whom Leahy said was just doing her job.

His accusation that she betrayed the Department of Justice is dangerous, Leahy said. The attorney general is the peoples attorney. Not the presidents attorney. He or she does not wear two hats at once.

Leahy added: I have very serious doubts that Senator Sessions would be an independent attorney general.

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Sessions vote delayed as Democrats blast Yates firing - Politico

Democrats Vow To Fight Trump’s Order On Immigration And Refugees – NPR

Democrats Vow To Fight Trump's Order On Immigration And Refugees
NPR
Democratic leaders held a protest Monday over President Trump's executive order on immigration. That's about as much as they can do to stop it, but it's not enough for some Democratic base voters. Facebook; Twitter. Google+. Email ...

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Democrats Vow To Fight Trump's Order On Immigration And Refugees - NPR