The Senate confirms John Ratcliffe to lead the CIA, giving Trump his
second Cabinet member
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[January 24, 2025]
By DAVID KLEPPER
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate on Thursday confirmed John Ratcliffe as CIA
director, President Donald Trump's nominee to lead America's premier spy
agency and his second nominee to win Senate approval.
Ratcliffe was director of national intelligence during Trump’s first
term and is the first person to have held that position and the top post
at the CIA. The Texas Republican is a former federal prosecutor who
emerged as a fierce Trump defender while serving as a congressman during
Trump’s first impeachment.
The vote was 74-25, with many Democrats voting no.
At his Senate hearing last week, Ratcliffe said the CIA must do better
when it comes to using technology such as artificial intelligence to
confront adversaries including Russia and China. He said the United
States needed to improve its intelligence capabilities while also
ensuring the protection of Americans' civil rights.
Ratcliffe said he would push the CIA to do more to harness technologies
such as AI and quantum computing while expanding use of human
intelligence collection.
“We’re not where we’re supposed to be,” Ratcliffe told members of the
Senate Intelligence Committee.
While some Democrats raised questions about Ratcliffe's ability to lead
the CIA objectively, Republicans hailed his experience and said they
looked forward to confirming the rest of Trump's national security
nominees.
Ratcliffe was sworn into office shortly after winning Senate
confirmation.
Former Florida Sen. Marco Rubio was confirmed earlier this week as
secretary of state, the first member of Trump's Cabinet.
The CIA director has not always been a part of a president’s Cabinet,
though President Joe Biden elevated the position to Cabinet level under
Ratcliffe’s predecessor, William Burns, and Trump’s White House lists
Ratcliffe as a Cabinet member.
Trump and other Republicans have criticized the work of the CIA and
other spy agencies, saying they have focused too much on climate change,
workforce diversity and other issues.
The calls for a broad overhaul have worried some current and former
intelligence officials who say the changes could make the country less
safe.
Ratcliffe has said he views China as America's greatest geopolitical
rival, and that Russia, Iran, North Korea and drug cartels, hacking
gangs and terrorist organizations also pose challenges to national
security.
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Vice President JD Vance swears in John Ratcliffe as CIA Director as
his wife Michele holds the Bible in the Vice Presidential ceremonial
office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White
House campus, Thursday, Jan. 23, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex
Brandon)
He supports the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, a government
spying program that allows authorities to collect without warrant
the communications of non-Americans outside the country. If those
people are communicating with Americans, those conversations can be
swept up, too, which has led to questions about violations of
personal rights.
Like other Trump nominees, Ratcliffe is a Trump loyalist. Aside from
his work to defend Trump during his first impeachment proceedings,
Ratcliffe also forcefully questioned former special counsel Robert
Mueller when he testified before lawmakers about his investigation
into Russian interference in the 2016 election.
As director of national intelligence, Ratcliffe oversaw and
coordinated the work of more than a dozen spy agencies. Among other
duties, the office directs efforts to detect and counter foreign
efforts to influence U.S. politics.
Trump picked Ratcliffe to serve in that position in 2019, but he
quickly withdrew from consideration after lawmakers raised questions
about his qualifications. He was ultimately confirmed by a sharply
divided Senate after Trump resubmitted the nomination.
In that job, Ratcliffe was accused by Democrats of politicizing
intelligence when he declassified Russian intelligence that
purported to reveal information about Democrats during the 2016
election even as he acknowledged the information might not be
accurate.
Before Thursday's confirmation vote Democrats questioned whether
Ratcliffe would place his loyalty to Trump ahead of the duties of
the office. Concerns raised by Democrats earlier in the week forced
the Senate to postpone Ratcliffe's confirmation vote by two days.
Trump’s second-term nominee for director of national intelligence,
Tulsi Gabbard, likely faces a tougher road to confirmation. Gabbard,
a former Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii, has faced bipartisan
criticism over past comments supportive of Russia and 2017 meetings
with then-Syrian President Bashar Assad.
Gabbard's confirmation hearing before the Senate Intelligence
Committee is scheduled for Jan. 30.
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