Senators voted to confirm Todd Blanche for deputy attorney general in early 2025, but there’s no guarantee they will now vote to install him as the nation’s chief law enforcement officer, reported Politico.
Blanche,
now serving as acting attorney general, faces a potentially rocky path through
the Senate, with multiple key Republicans not immediately committing to
supporting President Donald Trump’s expected nominee to run the Department of
Justice.
Senate
Majority Leader John Thune told reporters Thursday it was “hard to say” if
Blanche would have a difficult time getting confirmed to succeed Pam Bondi, who
was ousted from the position back in April.
“Most of
our members are pretty deferential to who the president wants in some of these
key positions,” Thune said, but added, “This is an environment where nothing’s
a safe or sure bet these days.”
Trump’s
nominees can lose three Republican votes and still be confirmed by calling in
Vice President JD Vance to break a tie.
But the
bigger hurdle could be getting Blanche through the Senate Judiciary Committee,
where opposition from one Republican is enough to bottle up a nomination unless
the nominee can also get help from Democrats on the panel. It’s not likely
Blanche would get that bipartisan support.
Sen. Thom
Tillis (R-N.C.) is viewed as the critical vote for Blanche to win over on the
Judiciary Committee. Tillis has vowed he won’t support Justice Department
nominees who he views as sympathetic those who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6,
2021, and previously
told POLITICO that the Justice Department’s “Anti-Weaponization Fund”
would be a factor in whether or not an attorney general nominee is able to be
confirmed.
Blanche
told House appropriators Tuesday that the Trump administration would not go
forward with administering payouts to individuals deemed victims of “lawfare”
by the federal government. But the attempt to establish such an account has
continued to present a political problem for Republicans, with many seeing
Blanche as the face of the effort.
“What we
need to do right now is focus on the [Anti-Weaponization] Fund, or he’s not
going to have a very good time in Judiciary Committee,” Tillis, who will retire
after the end of this year, told reporters when asked about Blanche’s
forthcoming nomination. “Just think about what the Democrats would do to him.”
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