Vance takes on a more visible transition role, working to boost Trump's
most contentious picks
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[November 23, 2024]
By JILL COLVIN and STEPHEN GROVES
WASHINGTON (AP) — After several weeks working mostly behind closed
doors, Vice President-elect JD Vance returned to Capitol Hill this week
in a new, more visible role: Helping Donald Trump try to get his most
contentious Cabinet picks to confirmation in the Senate, where Vance has
served for the last two years.
Vance arrived at the Capitol on Wednesday with former Rep. Matt Gaetz
and spent the morning sitting in on meetings between Trump’s choice for
attorney general and key Republicans, including members of the Senate
Judiciary Committee. The effort was for naught: Gaetz announced a day
later that he was withdrawing his name amid scrutiny over sex
trafficking allegations and the reality that he was unlikely to be
confirmed.
Thursday morning Vance was back, this time accompanying Pete Hegseth,
the “Fox & Friends Weekend” host whom Trump has tapped to be the next
secretary of defense. Hegseth also has faced allegations of sexual
assault that he denies.
Vance is expected to accompany other nominees for meetings in coming
weeks as he tries to leverage the two years he has spent in the Senate
to help push through Trump's picks.
Vance is taking on an atypical role as Senate guide for Trump
nominees
The role of introducing nominees around Capitol Hill is an unusual one
for a vice president-elect. Usually the job goes to a former senator who
has close relationships on the Hill, or a more junior aide.
But this time the role fits Vance, said Marc Short, who served as
Trump’s first director of legislative affairs as well as chief of staff
to Trump’s first vice president, Mike Pence, who spent more than a
decade in Congress and led the former president’s transition ahead of
his first term.
”JD probably has a lot of current allies in the Senate and so it makes
sense to have him utilized in that capacity,” Short said.
Unlike the first Trump transition, which played out before cameras at
Trump Tower in New York and at the president-elect's golf club in
Bedminster, New Jersey, this one has largely happened behind closed
doors in Palm Beach, Florida.
There, a small group of officials and aides meet daily at Trump's Mar-a-Lago
resort to run through possible contenders and interview job candidates.
The group includes Elon Musk, the billionaire who has spent so much time
at the club that Trump has joked he can’t get rid of him.
Vance has been a constant presence, even as he’s kept a lower profile.
The Ohio senator has spent much of the last two weeks in Palm Beach,
according to people familiar with his plans, playing an active role in
the transition, on which he serves as honorary chair.
Mar-a-Lago scene is a far cry from Vance's hardscrabble upbringing
Vance has been staying at a cottage on the property of the gilded club,
where rooms are adorned with cherubs, oriental rugs and intricate golden
inlays. It's a world away from the famously hardscrabble upbringing that
Vance documented in the memoir that made him famous, “Hillbilly Elegy.”
His young children have also joined him at Mar-a-Lago, at times. Vance
was photographed in shorts and a polo shirt playing with his kids on the
seawall of the property with a large palm frond, a U.S. Secret Service
robotic security dog in the distance.
On the rare days when he is not in Palm Beach, Vance has been joining
the sessions remotely via Zoom.
Though he has taken a break from TV interviews after months of constant
appearances, Vance has been active in the meetings, which began
immediately after the election and include interviews and as well as
presentations on candidates’ pluses and minuses.
Among those interviewed: Contenders to replace FBI Director Christopher
Wray, as Vance wrote in a since-deleted social media post.
Defending himself from criticism that he’d missed a Senate vote in which
one of President Joe Biden’s judicial nominees was confirmed, Vance
wrote that he was meeting at the time "with President Trump to interview
multiple positions for our government, including for FBI Director.”
“I tend to think it’s more important to get an FBI director who will
dismantle the deep state than it is for Republicans to lose a vote 49-46
rather than 49-45,” Vance added on X. “But that’s just me.”
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Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., left, and Vice President-elect Sen. JD
Vance, R-Ohio, walk together after leaving Vance's office on Capitol
Hill, Thursday, Nov. 21, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark
Schiefelbein)
Vance is making his voice heard as Trump stocks his Cabinet
While Vance did not come in to the transition with a list of people
he wanted to see in specific roles, he and his friend, Trump’s
eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., who is also a member of the transition
team, were eager to see former Democratic Rep. Tulsi Gabbard and
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. find roles in the administration.
Trump ended up selecting Gabbard as the next director of national
intelligence, a powerful position that sits atop the nation’s spy
agencies and acts as the president’s top intelligence adviser. And
he chose Kennedy to lead the Department of Health and Human
Services, a massive agency that oversees everything from drug and
food safety to Medicare and Medicaid.
Vance was also a big booster of Tom Homan, the former acting
director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, who will serve as
Trump's “border czar.”
In another sign of Vance's influence, James Braid, a top aide to the
senator, is expected to serve as Trump’s legislative affairs
director.
Allies say it’s too early to discuss what portfolio Vance might take
on in the White House. While he gravitates to issues like trade,
immigration and tech policy, Vance sees his role as doing whatever
Trump needs.
Vance was spotted days after the election giving his son’s Boy Scout
troop a tour of the Capitol and was there the day of leadership
elections. He returned in earnest this week, first with Gaetz —
arguably Trump’s most divisive pick — and then Hegseth, who has was
been accused of sexually assaulting a woman in 2017, according to an
investigative report made public this week. Hegseth told police at
the time that the encounter had been consensual and denied any
wrongdoing.
Vance hosted Hegseth in his Senate office as GOP senators, including
those who sit on the Senate Armed Services Committee, filtered in to
meet with the nominee for defense secretary.
While a president’s nominees usually visit individual senators’
offices, meeting them on their own turf, the freshman senator — who
is accompanied everywhere by a large Secret Service detail that
makes moving around more unwieldy — instead brought Gaetz to a room
in the Capitol on Wednesday and Hegseth to his office on Thursday.
Senators came to them.
Vance made it to votes Wednesday and Thursday, but missed others on
Thursday afternoon.
Vance will draw on his Senate background going forward
Vance is expected to continue to leverage his relationships in the
Senate after Trump takes office. But many Republicans there have
longer relationships with Trump himself.
Sen. Kevin Cramer, a North Dakota Republican, said that Trump was
often the first person to call him back when he was trying to reach
high-level White House officials during Trump's first term.
“He has the most active Rolodex of just about anybody I’ve ever
known,” Cramer said, adding that Vance would make a good addition.
“They’ll divide names up by who has the most persuasion here,”
Cramer said, but added, “Whoever his liaison is will not work as
hard at it as he will.”
Cramer was complimentary of the Ohio senator, saying he was
“pleasant” and ” interesting” to be around.
″He doesn’t have the long relationships," he said. "But we all like
people that have done what we’ve done. I mean, that’s sort of a
natural kinship, just probably not as personally tied.”
Under the Constitution, Vance will also have a role presiding over
the Senate and breaking tie votes. But he's not likely to be needed
for that as often as was Kamala Harris, who broke a record number of
ties for Democrats as vice president, since Republicans will have a
bigger cushion in the chamber next year.
___
Colvin reported from New York. Associated Press writer Mary Clare
Jalonick contributed to this report.
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