Trump is already testing Congress and daring Republicans to oppose him
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[November 15, 2024]
By LISA MASCARO
WASHINGTON (AP) — After a resounding election victory, delivering what
President-elect Donald Trump and Republicans call a “mandate” to govern,
an uneasy political question is emerging: Will there be any room for
dissent in the U.S. Congress?
Trump is laying down a gauntlet even before taking office challenging
the Senate, in particular, to dare defy him over the nominations of Matt
Gaetz, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and other controversial choices for his
Cabinet and administration positions.
The promise of unified government, with the Republican Party’s sweep of
the White House and GOP majorities in the House and Senate, is making
way for a more complicated political reality as congressional leaders
confront anew what it means to line up with Trump’s agenda.
“This is going to be a red alert moment for American democracy,” Sen.
Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said on CNN after Trump tapped Gaetz for attorney
general.
Trump is returning to the White House at the height of his political
power, having won both the Electoral College and the popular vote for
his party for the first time in decades. The trifecta in Washington
offers a tantalizing political opportunity for Republicans, opening up a
universe of political and policy priorities — from tax cuts to mass
deportations to the gutting of the regulatory and federal bureaucracy,
along with Trump's vows to seek vengeance and prosecution of his
perceived enemies and pardon those who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6,
2021.
But for Congress, it’s also a potentially existential moment, one that
is testing whether its status as a co-equal branch of U.S. government
can withstand a second Trump administration.
“One of the possible futures for Congress is that it becomes a rubber
stamp,” said Phillip Wallach, a scholar at the conservative American
Enterprise Institute, who writes extensively about Congress.
Wallach said the threat to Congress has been on his mind, but he also
believes it would be more pronounced if Republicans had won larger
majorities. The House, in fact, may end up with slimmer numbers, and the
Senate's 53-seat advantage, while more than the simple majority needed
to confirm nominees, can hardly be seen as mandates.
Besides, “they’re not wimps,” he said of elected lawmakers. “There’s no
reason for them to just turn themselves into a doormat.”
It’s a changed Washington from Trump’s first term. Congress has been
purged of his strongest critics. At the same time, the Supreme Court has
shifted dramatically rightward, with three Trump-appointed justices, and
a majority decision over the summer that granted the president broad
immunity from prosecution.
Trump’s Cabinet picks are posing the biggest early test for Congress.
While Trump's choice of Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., for secretary of state
is expected to have somewhat broad support, including from Democrats,
others like Kennedy, Tulsi Gabbard for director of national intelligence
and Pete Hegseth as defense secretary are raising more scrutiny.
The choice of Gaetz, a fierce Trump loyalist who talks about the
wholesale upheaval of the Justice Department, is all the more troubling
for senators because of a House ethics probe over alleged sexual
misconduct and illicit drug use. He denies the allegations but submitted
his resignation from Congress as soon as he was nominated, effectively
shutting down the probe.
Sen. Dick Durbin, the Democratic chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, which would consider the Gaetz nomination, called on the
House to “preserve and share their report" with the panel.
Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, a Republican member of the Judiciary
committee, said he expects “any and all” information on the nominees
will be made available.
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Senate Minority Whip John Thune, R-S.D., joined at left by Sen. John
Barrasso, R-Wyo., meets with reporters after he was elected to
succeed longtime GOP leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, at the
Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2024. (AP Photo/J. Scott
Applewhite)
Other Republicans in the House and Senate stood with Gaetz,
supporting his effort to take on the Justice Department over what
they see as perceived bias, particularly over its prosecutions of
Trump for trying to overturn the 2020 election ahead of the Capitol
attack and for hoarding classified documents.
"I know the Democrats are clutching their pearls right now, and
they’re very, very upset about everything," said Sen. Bill Hagerty,
R-Tenn., on Fox News.
“But if you think about how they have weaponized the DOJ, this is a
situation that needs serious reform,” he said. “It’s President
Trump’s prerogative to choose who he wants to nominate.”
Incoming Senate GOP Leader John Thune said confirming Trump's
nominations will be a priority next year and senators “should expect
an aggressive schedule until his nominees are confirmed.”
Complicating the matter for senators is the Trump campaign's
decision to not engage, so far, in the traditional transition
process, having declined to sign agreements with the federal
government that would launch FBI background checks of nominees,
among other standard steps before confirmation hearings.
Senators may be forced to consider nominees that have not been
vetted in the traditional ways.
Rep. Mike Quigley, D-Ill., a former member of the House Intelligence
Committee, worried Americans may be left in the dark about their top
officials. “People have a right to know who’s leading critical
aspects of their government,” he said.
Intensifying his demands on the Senate, Trump suggested it should
consider so-called recess appointments of his nominees — a highly
unorthodox request that essentially asks the Senate to drop its
constitutional advise-and-consent role and allow his nominees to be
installed without a vote.
Wallach said if senators chose that route it would be “an act of
extreme institutional self-sabotage.”
Congress has been here before, in the first Trump administration,
when the White House tested the limits of its executive power.
One of the most significant confrontations of that earlier Trump era
was over his promised border wall, when the White House tried to
poach congressionally approved funds for military base construction
projects and repurpose them for the wall between the U.S. and
Mexico.
Congress largely won that round, after long fights, but it's about
to be tested in new ways.
Trump is planning a series of executive orders on Day One of the new
administration to launch his mass deportations and other priorities.
Trump allies, including Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., and
influential commentator Charlie Kirk, have warned of consequences in
the form of primary challenges to senators who fail to confirm
nominees.
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., the on-again-off-again Trump ally, said
he typically confirms a president's nominees, regardless of party,
and intends to be a yes vote again.
“I consider this matter closed,” he said.
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Associated Press writers Mary Clare Jalonick and Kevin Freking
contributed to this report.
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