🎂 HAPPY BIRTHDAY MELANIA TRUMP!! 🎂 *** JUST IN: President Trump announces a “Fox & Friends” interview for 8 a.m. EDT (via tweet, natch) *** CIA Director Mike Pompeo will be confirmed by the Senate today to become the next secretary of State. That’s the lone bit of good news for President Trump’s Cabinet officials and nominees, who are otherwise fighting for their political lives. Consider: Retired Navy Rear Adm. Ronny Jackson The bizarre saga for Trump’s pick to lead the Veterans Affairs Department appears uglier by the hour. Montana Sen. Jon Tester, the ranking Democrat on the Veterans’ Affairs Committee, is circulating a two-page document cataloguing the mounting claims against Jackson, the White House doctor under former President Obama and now under Trump. Among the new allegations: - Jackson got drunk and wrecked a government vehicle.
- Complaints from former staffers that he is “abusive” and “volatile.”
- He gave a large supply of opioid painkillers to a White House official.
Jackson is denying the claims and the White House is digging in to defend him. Veterans’ Affairs Committee chairman Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.) said yesterday the nominee would get a hearing. But Jackson’s nomination has been a rolling disaster and in Washington’s collective opinion, he is now a lost cause. He started with bipartisan reservations about his prior management experience. He is closing out the week as a case study in the White House’s failure to fully vet a nominee or consult with Congress. White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders described Jackson on Wednesday as “highly qualified.” A Republican senator, speaking on background to The Hill’s Alexander Bolton, shared a different view: “He’s totally unqualified.” The Hill: Republicans want Jackson to withdraw. The Memo: Jackson ‘fiasco’ casts pall over White House. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt Pruitt will face the music at hearings today ostensibly about his agency’s budget. He will almost certainly be questioned about the explosion of spending and ethics scandals involving his agency leadership. Rep. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) told The Hill’s Timothy Cama and Miranda Green that he wants to see “some contrition” from Pruitt. But The New York Times obtained Pruitt’s prepared talking points, indicating the administrator intends to use a defense that shifts blame to others. The White House is showing symptoms of Pruitt fatigue. Republicans on Capitol Hill, similarly afflicted, are increasingly open to investigating him. Expect fireworks. The Hill: IG investigations cast shadow over Pruitt. CIA director nominee Gina Haspel The veteran intelligence officer’s association with the harsh interrogation techniques the U.S. government employed after the Sept. 11 attacks will make her May 9 confirmation hearing difficult. Two scoops here from The Hill’s Katie Bo Williams explain the dynamics: The Hill: CIA will allow senators to review classified material on Haspel. The Hill: Top Senate Dem requests DOJ report on Haspel’s role in destroyed tapes. Elsewhere: The Washington Post: Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson to propose raising rent on low-income individuals. The New York Times: White House budget officer Mick Mulvaney praises influence of lobbying money during speech to bankers. |
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