From Yahoo/Reuters:
“Senate confirms chairman of joint chiefs as GOP senator
still blocking hundreds of military nominees”
(Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. CQ Brown, Jr. speaks about
U.S. defense strategy at the Brookings Institution in Washington, Monday, Feb.
13, 2023. Navy Adm. Christopher Grady, who currently serves as the military’s
No. 2 officer as Joint Chiefs vice chairman, will simultaneously have to fill
in as chairman starting Oct. 1 with the retirement of Gen. Mark Milley if his
replacement, Air Force Gen. C.Q. Brown, can’t get confirmed in the next two
weeks.)
The Senate on Wednesday confirmed Gen. CQ Brown as the next
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, putting him in place to succeed Gen.
Mark Milley when he retires at the end of the month. Brown's confirmation on a
83-11 vote, months after President Joe Biden nominated him for the post, comes
as Democrats try to maneuver around holds placed on hundreds of nominations by
Alabama Sen. Tommy Tuberville over the Pentagon's abortion policy. The Senate
is also expected to confirm Gen. Randy George to be Army Chief of Staff and
Gen. Eric Smith as commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps this week. Tuberville
has been blocking the Senate from the routine process of approving military
nominations in groups, frustrating Democrats who had said they would not go
through the time-consuming process of bringing up individual nominations for a
vote. More than 300 nominees are still stalled amid Tuberville's blockade, and
confirming them one-by-one would take months.
But Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., reversed
course on Wednesday and moved to force votes on Brown, George and Smith. “Senator
Tuberville is forcing us to face his obstruction head on,” Schumer said. “I
want to make clear to my Republican colleagues — this cannot continue.” Tuberville
did not object to the confirmation votes, saying he will maintain his holds but
is fine with bringing up nominations individually for roll call votes. White
House national security spokesman John Kirby said that Brown’s confirmation,
along with expected votes on Smith and George, is positive news. But “we should
have never been in this position,” he said. “While good for these three
officers, it doesn’t fix the problem or provide a path forward for the 316
other general and flag officers that are held up by this ridiculous hold,”
Kirby told reporters.
Brown, a career fighter pilot, was the Air Force’s first
Black commander of the Pacific Air Forces and most recently its first Black
chief of staff, making him the first African American to lead any of the
military branches. His confirmation will also mark the first time the
Pentagon’s top two posts were held by African Americans, with Defense Secretary
Lloyd Austin as the top civilian leader. Brown, 60, replaces Joint Chiefs
Chairman Army Gen. Mark Milley, who is retiring after four decades in military
service. Milley's four-year term as chairman ends on Sept. 30. Tuberville said
on Wednesday that he will continue to hold up the other nominations unless the
Pentagon ends its policy of paying for travel when a service member has to go
out of state to get an abortion or other reproductive care. The Biden
administration instituted the policy after the Supreme Court overturned the
nationwide right to an abortion and some states have limited or banned the
procedure. “Let’s do one at a time or change the policy back,” Tuberville said
after Schumer put the three nominations up for a vote. “Let’s vote on it.” In
an effort to force Tuberville’s hand, Democrats had said they would not bring
up the most senior nominees while the others were still stalled. “There’s an
old saying in the military, leave no one behind,” Senate Armed Services
Chairman Jack Reed said in July. But in a frustrated speech on the Senate
floor, Schumer said Wednesday he was left with no other choice. “Senator
Tuberville is using them as pawns,” Schumer said of the nominees.
The votes come as a host of military officers have spoken out
about the damage of the delays for service members. While Tuberville's holds
are focused on all general and flag officers, they carry career impacts on the
military’s younger rising officers. Until each general or admiral is confirmed,
it blocks an opportunity for a more junior officer to rise. That affects pay,
retirement, lifestyle and future assignments — and in some fields where the
private sector will pay more, it becomes harder to convince those highly
trained young leaders to stay. The blockade has frustrated members on both
sides of the aisle, and it is still unclear how the larger standoff will be
resolved. Schumer did not say if he will put additional nominations on the
floor. The monthslong holds have devolved into a convoluted procedural back and
forth in recent days. Tuberville claimed victory after Schumer’s move, even
though the Pentagon policy remains unchanged. “We called them out, and they
blinked,” he told reporters of Schumer.
^ Tuberville has been holding the Military and the Country
hostage for his own selfish gains and now we are going around him to start
getting things done again. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/senate-set-confirm-3-military-204729487.html
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.