Ted Cruz Gave Obama An Early Christmas Gift Over The Weekend
Over the weekend Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) went to battle with Democrats, but his gambit backfired and ironically gave Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and President Barack Obama an unexpected Christmas gift.
It began on Friday evening, when Reid and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) were close to securing an agreement to quickly vote on the $1.1 trillion "CRomnibus" spending bill to avert a government shutdown. Cruz, along with Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT), blindsided Republican leaders by objecting and dragging out the process as they demanded a vote to defund
Obama's executive actions on immigration.
What Cruz didn't count on was Reid instead seizing on the occasion — which forced the Senate to stay in session for procedural votes — to move forward with starting the confirmation vote clock on a whopping 24 Obama nominations that otherwise might have been jettisoned. The Texan's tactic angered numerous Republican colleagues.
"I think most Republicans think that Christmas came early for Democrats," Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) said, according to
Roll Call, blaming Cruz. "I haven't seen Harry smile this much in years, and I didn't particularly like it."
Twelve of the nominations are for federal districts courts, an unusually high number to confirm in a lame duck session and a big boost to
Obama's judicial legacy. At least two prominent executive branch nominees face GOP opposition: Vivek Murthy for surgeon general (whom
the National Rifle Association has been working to block) and Tony Blinken for deputy secretary of state. The confirmation votes will start Monday.
On Saturday night, Cruz dropped his objections and allowed a vote on the funding bill, which
passed 56-40 just hours ahead of a potential government shutdown — after Reid had already pushed forward with the nominations. Cruz raised a "
constitutional point of order" order against the spending bill over Obama's immigration actions, which all Democrats and 22 Republicans — including McConnell — voted down.
"Senator Cruz's stunt got two fewer votes than the twenty-four Obama nominees he helped Senate Democrats advance tonight," Reid spokesman Adam Jentleson mocked.
Cruz's supporters dismiss GOP attacks on his tactics,
arguing that he ceded nothing because Reid would have called back the Senate anyway to vote on nominations.
That's possible — Democratic leaders had
wanted to move nominations in the lame duck — but if the spending bill had finished early, they would have had a hard time persuading members to cut short their holidays and stay in Washington to vote on nominations.
So they gleefully pinned it on Cruz.