Trump skirts Senate to install nominee under fire for Islamaphobic tweets in Pentagon post
Anthony Tata has been designated as the official 'performing the duties of' the deputy undersecretary of defense policy.
By LARA SELIGMAN
President Donald Trump has installed a nominee for a top Pentagon job in a senior Department of Defense post on a temporary basis after lawmakers abruptly canceled his confirmation hearing last week amid lingering questions about his fitness for the role.
Retired Army Brig. Gen. Anthony Tata, a novelist, former state government official and Fox News regular, withdrew Sunday from consideration to be undersecretary of defense for policy, a position that requires Senate confirmation, the Pentagon said in a statement emailed to POLITICO Sunday.
Instead, he has been designated as the official "performing the duties of" the deputy undersecretary of defense policy. The position Tata will assume is one that James H. Anderson was confirmed for in June; Anderson has also been serving as acting undersecretary of defense policy and will remain in that post.
Since Trump announced his intent to nominate Tata earlier this year, the former Army general has been widely criticized for tweets calling former President Barack Obama a "terrorist leader" and referring to Islam as the "most oppressive violent religion I know of," among other controversial statements.
Tata later said he regretted the now-deleted tweets.
His nomination to be undersecretary of defense for policy, the department's number three official, was upended Thursday when the Senate Armed Services Committee canceled his confirmation hearing minutes before it was scheduled to begin.
Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.), the panel’s chair, said lawmakers didn't have enough information about Tata to consider him for the position, while Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island, the committee's top Democrat, said, "Members on both sides of the aisle have raised serious questions about this nominee."
On Sunday, Reed condemned the president’s move. “If President Trump’s goal is to hollow out, politicize, and undermine the Pentagon the way he has the State Department and Intelligence Community, then mission accomplished. This is an offensive, destabilizing move,” he said. Reed also called move “an insult an insult to our troops, professionals at the Pentagon, the Senate, and the American people.“
A majority of Democrats on the panel have come out publicly against Tata. One Republican, Sen. Kevin Cramer of North Dakota, has also warned he would vote no on his confirmation, though for different reasons.
Still, the White House press secretary said Friday that Trump was standing by the nominee.
The intent to install Tata in a temporary position short of Senate confirmation drew a rebuke earlier Sunday from Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.), the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, who accused the administration of making an end run around Congress.
“If an appointee cannot gain the support of the Senate, as is clearly the case with Tata, then the President should not put that person into an identical temporary role,” Smith said in a statement. “This evasion of scrutiny makes our government less accountable and prioritizes loyalty over competence.”
“The vacancies at the Department of Defense, which have now hit record highs under the Trump administration, should be filled through the existing nomination and confirmation process," Smith added. "If confirmations cannot be completed, the President must find new, qualified people who can win the support of the Senate."
Tata has been serving as a senior adviser to Defense Secretary Mark Esper.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.