Trump threatens to adjourn U.S. Congress over 'scam' preventing
appointments
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[April 16, 2020]
By Steve Holland and Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump threatened on Wednesday to shut down Congress so he could
fill vacancies in his administration without Senate confirmation, saying
he was frustrated lawmakers were not in Washington to vote on his
nominees for federal judgeships and other government positions.
"The current practice of leaving town, while conducting phony pro forma
sessions, is a dereliction of duty that the American people cannot
afford during this crisis," an angry Trump told reporters at his daily
White House briefing on the coronavirus crisis.
"It is a scam that they do. It's a scam and everyone knows it, and it's
been that way for a long time," Trump said.
No U.S. president has ever used the authority, included in the
Constitution, to adjourn both chambers of Congress if they cannot agree
on a date to adjourn.
It was not immediately clear if Congress' current absence from
Washington because of the global pandemic could be classified as being
due to a failure to agree on an adjournment date.
The Senate and House of Representatives have both announced plans to
return to Washington on May 4, and had been scheduled to be out of
Washington for two weeks in April for their annual Easter break even
before the coronavirus crisis.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell discussed nominations with Trump
on Wednesday and promised to find ways to confirm those "considered
mission-critical" to the pandemic, a McConnell spokesman said.
"However, under Senate rules, that would take consent from Democratic
leader Chuck Schumer," the spokesman said.
Members of the Republican-controlled Senate and Democratic-led House
have been out of Washington since mid-March, as government officials and
health experts recommended that Americans stay home to avoid spreading
the deadly coronavirus.
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President Donald Trump addresses the daily coronavirus task force
briefing in the Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, U.S.,
April 15, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis
As is typical during congressional recesses, the House and Senate
have held regular "pro forma" sessions, brief meetings that can last
less than a minute, rather than formally adjourning.
As long as those short sessions are held regularly, the president
cannot make "recess appointments.
After lamenting that some nominees have waited months to be
confirmed, Trump threatened to force Congress to adjourn. He
acknowledged that such a move would face a legal challenge, but was
confident he would prevail.
"We'll probably be challenged in court, and we'll see who wins,"
Trump said.
Any legal challenge would take many months.
Trump's appointment of conservative federal judges is an important
part of his appeal to Republican voters as he runs for re-election
in November. His campaign issued a tweet about his adjournment
threat almost immediately after he made it.
Trump said his nominees would help deal with the pandemic, without
explaining how that would be the case.
(Reporting by Steve Holland and Patricia Zengerle; Writing by
Patricia Zengerle and Daphne Psaledakis; Editing by Tom Brown and
Peter Cooney)
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