-
Scarlett Johansson Will Only Take Photos With Fans Under 1 Condition - 32 mins ago
-
S&P 500 Dips Into Correction as Stock Market Sours on Trump - 37 mins ago
-
‘Today’ Host Gets Body Modification on TV - about 1 hour ago
-
‘I Thought I Was Going to Die Here’: 6 Days Trapped in a Car, Just Out of Sight - about 1 hour ago
-
In California, cost of undocumented healthcare is $3B over estimates - 2 hours ago
-
Trump Threatens Federal Override on NY Pipeline Ahead of Hochul Meeting - 2 hours ago
-
‘We Hear You, Mr. President’: The World Lines Up to Buy American Gas - 2 hours ago
-
Padilla, Schiff to vote against GOP’s stopgap budget measure as possible shutdown looms - 2 hours ago
-
Ryan Seacrest Shows Off Muscles on ‘Wheel of Fortune’ Set - 2 hours ago
-
Pete Buttigieg, a Possible 2028 Contender, Won’t Run for Senate in Michigan - 3 hours ago
Hegseth Is Second Cabinet Secretary to Need Tiebreaker Vote, After DeVos
Nearly eight years ago, another Trump administration cabinet secretary barely survived her confirmation vote, advancing only after a vice president’s tiebreaker vote.
That nominee was Betsy DeVos, the wealthy Republican donor who had almost no experience in public education and who was confirmed to lead the Department of Education.
On Feb. 7, 2017, two Republican senators, Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, turned against Mr. Trump’s pick for the job and voted against her. But without a third Republican to join their ranks, Ms. Devos was ultimately confirmed on a 51-to-50 vote.
It was the first time a vice president — in this case, Vice President Mike Pence — had been summoned to the Capitol to break a tie on a cabinet nomination.
On Friday, Pete Hegseth became the second person to be confirmed to a cabinet secretary post when Vice President JD Vance cast the deciding vote, ensuring he will be the next defense secretary. Ms. Murkowski and Ms. Collins also voted against him, along with Senator Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky.
Democrats argued that allegations of sexual misconduct, abusive behavior, public drunkenness and fiscal mismanagement of two nonprofit veterans groups made Mr. Hegseth unqualified and unfit to oversee the country’s 1.3 million active duty troops and the Pentagon’s nearly $850 billion budget.