Senator Alexander press release, WASHINGTON, March 17, 2015 – U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.)
today announced his opposition to the nomination of Loretta Lynch for
U.S. attorney general. He released the following statement:
"I will vote against President Obama’s nomination of Loretta Lynch
for attorney general of the United States. This is an opportunity,
within the Senate rules, to express my disapproval of the president’s
abuse of executive authority, and it’s an opportunity I intend to take. "
Alexander said that Lynch's confirmation "should be decided by a
majority vote of senators, as cabinet nominations have been decided
throughout the history of the Senate.” On Feb 4 Alexander and Sen. Mike
Lee (R-Utah) introduced legislation to establish by Senate rule the
Senate tradition of approving presidential nominations by a simple
majority vote, rather than the 60 votes it would take to end a
filibuster. Alexander said that, according to information compiled by
the Senate historian and the Congressional Research Service, in the
entire history of the U.S. Senate since Thomas Jefferson wrote the rules
in 1789, no cabinet nominee has ever been denied confirmation by
requiring 60 votes to end a filibuster.
Senator Corker press release, WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) today announced he
will oppose the nomination of Loretta Lynch to be attorney general of
the United States.
“The job of the U.S. attorney general is to enforce federal laws as
written, not as the administration wishes they were written,” said
Corker. “While I believe Ms. Lynch is an impressive attorney and a
committed public servant, nothing revealed during our personal meeting
or at her confirmation hearing has assured me that she will be an
independent attorney general and refrain from selective enforcement of
the law, and therefore I will not be supporting her confirmation.”
Top Stories
No comments:
Post a Comment