WASHINGTON — Just hours after President Donald Trump was sworn into office, the Senate on Friday confirmed two nominees for critical national security positions, James N. Mattis as defense secretary and John F. Kelly as homeland security secretary.
Republicans had hoped to approve a far greater number of nominees on Trump's first day in office, but that process has been delayed because several of Trump's nominees have been late in filing ethics disclosures, prompting protests by Senate Democrats.
While Republicans sought to confirm a third national security nominee Friday, Rep. Mike Pompeo of Kansas, the president's nominee to lead the CIA, Democrats planned to delay his approval, noting that he had not even been approved by the Senate Intelligence Committee as of Friday.
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Three Democratic senators — Ron Wyden of Oregon, Patrick J. Leahy of Vermont and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut — objected to what they characterized as an overly speedy push to confirm Pompeo.
"The importance of the position of CIA Director, especially in these dangerous times, demands that the nomination be thoroughly vetted, questioned and debated," the senators said in a statement.
The skirmish over nominees set a grim tone for the first day of Senate under the new president. The Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., chastised Democrats for delaying nominees, pointing out that the Senate had cleared seven such Cabinet officials on President Barack Obama's first day in office in 2009.
Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., responded that McConnell had refused to even allow a hearing to be held for Obama's Supreme Court nominee, Judge Merrick M. Garland, during his last year in office.
"For those who have forgotten the record of the Republicans in the Senate when it comes to delaying nominations, Exhibit A will continue to be the vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court," Durbin said on the Senate floor, adding, "That vacancy continued for political reasons regardless of the fact that it created at least a hardship and some confusion on the highest court of the land. It went on for 10, 11 months and it continues to this day."
Mattis and Kelly are retired Marine Corps generals. Federal law requires a seven-year waiting period between active duty and serving as secretary of defense; Congress passed legislation last week granting a waiver to Mattis, and Trump signed it Friday.
At a luncheon at the Capitol, Trump said the generals in his Cabinet "are going to keep us so safe" while describing them as out of "central casting." He also nudged Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York over the pending confirmations.
"Our Cabinet's lined up and ready," he said. "I know eventually Chuck's going to approve them, I'm sure. I really believe that."