The Senate confirmed President Obama?s nominees to  head the Labor Department and the Environmental Protection Agency  Thursday,  clearing the decks of the controversial nominees that had  threatened to  push the Senate into a parliamentary meltdown just two  days ago.
Thomas  Perez was confirmed to be Labor Department  secretary on a 54-46  party-line vote after having barely survived a GOP  filibuster a day  earlier. Meanwhile, Gina McCarthy was confirmed to be  EPA administrator  on a 59-40 vote.
If  all Republicans who  voted against Mr. Perez had decided to filibuster,  they could have  blocked his nomination. But thanks to a deal reached on Tuesday, some   Republican senators agreed to let the nominees go through in exchange   for Democrats agreeing not to use a parliamentary short cut to rewrite   the rules and end the chance the minority to filibuster executive branch   nominees in the future.
?As  we all saw this week, the Senate  came together. We talked to each  other, we made bipartisan progress,  and we were able to reduce the  gridlock and approve President Obama?s  nominees, and that was a very,  very positive step forward for all of  us,? said Sen. Patty Murray,  Washington Democrat.
Republicans   had blocked Ms. McCarthy for months as they sought to force the EPA to   agree to more transparency. The agency has been accused of failing to   keep electronic records such as emails, and several former officials   used private email accounts to conduct agency business.
But   while some lawmakers has personal reservations about Ms. McCarthy, a   longtime top EPA official, most who voted against her said they were   really sending a signal to Mr. Obama to rein in the agency.
?My   fight is with President Obama and the EPA, the regulatory agency that   has consistently placed unreasonable regulations and unobtainable   standards on energy production, rather than focus on efforts to develop a   domestic all-of-the-above energy strategy for the future,? said Sen.   Joe Manchin III, a Democrat from West Virginia, a coal-producing state   where the EPA is often viewed as a hindrance to economic development.
For   Republicans, though, Mr. Perez was even more controversial. They   accused him of lying, of obstructing a congressional investigation and   of putting his ideology ahead of the law in his tenure leading the   Justice Department?s civil rights division.
?Based  on the  evidence, Tom Perez is more than just some left-wing ideologue ?  he?s a  left-wing ideologue who appears perfectly willing to bend the  rules to  achieve his ends,? said Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.
Hispanic   groups had made the confirmation of Mr. Perez, the son of Dominican   immigrants, a top priority, saying he would be a good addition to Mr.   Obama?s Cabinet. Now they have turned their attention to the next major   opening for the top job at the Homeland Security Department, where   Secretary Janet Napolitano is on the way out.
The  National  Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials said Mr.  Obama  should ?act swiftly to ensure his Cabinet is fully representative  of  the diversity of this great nation by nominating a high-level Latino   candidate.?
The  Senate has now confirmed four of the seven  nominees who Democrats had  said must be approved in order to prevent  them from using the so-called  ?nuclear option,? a parliamentary tactic  to change the Senate?s  operating rules in mid-session and limit  filibusters.
As  part of that deal, Mr. Obama has withdrawn two  other nominees he made  to the National Labor Relations Board, and  replaced them with two new  NLRB appointments.
The  two  withdrawn names were controversial because Mr. Obama had used his   recess powers to appoint them earlier last year, but federal appeals   courts have called those nominees into question, saying the president   violated the Constitution in making the appointments.
Source: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/jul/18/gina-mccarthy-confirmed-head-epa/?utm_source=RSS_Feed&utm_medium=RSS
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