It took roughly 10 months, but Sen. Tommy Tuberville last week largely abandoned his blockade against the confirmation of military nominees. Immediately after the Alabama Republican backed off his radical and unprecedented tactic, the Senate started clearing the backlog and quickly confirmed 425 officers.
But that burst of progress did not suddenly turn this into an all’s-well-that-ends-well story. A leading Navy official, for example, has said it will likely “take years to recover” from the far-right senator’s blockade.
It was against this backdrop that the Senate this week took fresh steps to at least try to put things right. NBC News reported overnight:
Senators passed a bill Thursday that would give a retroactive pay increase to service members who were affected by Sen. Tommy Tuberville’s monthslong hold on military promotions. The measure passed by unanimous consent, meaning all 100 senators agreed and no roll call vote was needed.
Note, the Alabaman could’ve objected to this effort. He instead co-sponsored the bill that was designed to address the unnecessary harm he caused.
It was just last week when the backpay proposal took shape, and now it has cleared the upper chamber, offering a timely reminder that Congress is capable of working quite quickly when it wants to.








