Read a Venezuelan Guard's 'Chilling' Account About the Delta Force Raid That Nabbed...
Watch What Happens When This Leftist Protester Accosts a CNN Reporter in Minneapolis
Is This Why the Media Isn't Covering the Iran Protests?
Here's How Much Commie Mamdani's 'Affordable' Government Housing Will Cost You
Knoxville Orchestra Plays Sour Notes of Racial Preference over Talent
ICE Stories They Don’t Tell You
They Can Hate Israel All They Want
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 302: What the Bible Says About Pain
CNN Panel Sparks Firestorm After Abby Phillip Calls Somali Families 'Victims' of Minnesota...
Syrian Man Pleads Guilty to Stealing Nearly $191K in U.S. Social Security Benefits
Leftist Agitators Stalk and Threaten to Kill Journalist Covering Minneapolis Unrest
Minneapolis Radicals Begin Distributing Devices to Disable ICE Vehicles
Sons of Liberty, Sons of Legacy: Forming the Men Who Will Shape America’s...
Banning the Muslim Brotherhood: A Good Start, Part 2
The Problem of Clergy Sowing Discord
Tipsheet

House Democrats Vote to Approve Waiver for Biden's Defense Secretary Pick, But Not for Trump's

AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

Democrats in the House were less than happy when then-President Trump appointed famed Marine Corps Gen. James Mattis to be his secretary of defense when he first got into office. Due to federal law, Mattis required a waiver from Congress to serve as defense secretary since he was not out of the military long enough to serve in the top civilian role.

Advertisement

In 2017, an overwhelming number of House Democrats, 150, voted against Mattis being given the waiver, including then-House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Rep. Adam Smith (D-WA), who was the ranking member on the House Armed Services Committee.

Fast forward to 2021 and the House, now in Democratic control, was presented with the same problem for President Joe Biden's pick for defense secretary, Gen. Lloyd Austin. Austin also required the waiver, but Democrats were much more willing to grant him it.

Smith said in a series of tweets this month that he urged "all my Democratic colleagues" to vote for the waiver.

The House voted 326-78 to pass Austin's waiver, with many more Republicans giving support than Democrats when the roles were reversed in 2017.

In a statement, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) said he supported the waiver for Austin but slammed Democrats for their hypocrisy on the waiver issue.

Advertisement

"Some have said 'civilian leadership of the military has been a cornerstone of our democracy since the Founders, and for good reason…The American people are entitled to regular order and thoughtful scrutiny of nominees and any potential waivers.' These were Speaker Pelosi’s words just four years ago when it was a Republican president’s nominee for Secretary of Defense who needed a waiver," McCarthy said.

"Now that the nominee has been named by someone in their own party, House Democrats have no issue skipping regular order, rushing through a waiver, and depriving the American people of the thorough process the Speaker herself once said they deserved. House Democrats also overwhelmingly opposed the waiver for President Trump’s Secretary of Defense nominee. And yet today they argued that a waiver is now okay given we have a Democrat in the White House. We should call it for what it is: a blatant, partisan flip flop," he added.

Austin was officially confirmed by the Senate on Friday to be Biden's defense secretary.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement