There’s a qualitative difference between using legislative tools and abusing legislative tools. Watching some senators take advantage of the chamber’s informal rules on “procedural holds” clearly offers evidence of the latter.
Revisiting our recent coverage, the most indefensible example, is Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama, who has imposed a blockade against U.S. military promotions, as part of a tantrum over abortion policy. Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia is standing in the way of EPA nominees, because he’s upset about how an environmental policy he helped write is being implemented.
Republican Sen. J.D. Vance recently joined the misguided parade, announcing blanket holds on Justice Department nominees in response to federal prosecutors having the audacity to charge Donald Trump with multiple felonies, just because they have extensive evidence of alleged criminal wrongdoing. (The Ohioan recently tried to justify his tactics. It didn’t go well.)
Alas, the list keeps growing. The Wall Street Journal reported:
A pair of Republican senators have thrown up roadblocks to the confirmation of dozens of U.S. ambassadors, marking the latest effort by lawmakers to delay President Biden’s nominees until their demands are addressed. Sens. J.D. Vance (R., Ohio) and Rand Paul (R., Ky.) — citing concerns about progressive political ideology and Covid-19 research records respectively — have put holds on State Department appointees, primarily career foreign-service officers.
Vance told The Wall Street Journal he’s placed holds on roughly 30 nominees, including the White House’s nominee to the African Union, career diplomat Stephanie Sullivan, because the senator considers her “woke.”
Kentucky’s Paul, meanwhile, is standing in the way of State Department nominees, including nominees for ambassadors, because he’s looking for evidence related to his Covid theories.
Not to be outdone, the same report added that Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas has held up a would-be assistant secretary of state.
Taken together, Foreign Policy magazine last week summarized, “Dozens of important national security posts are now sitting empty at a dangerous era in U.S. foreign policy due to Republican congressional holds as threats proliferate, from Russia’s war in Ukraine to China’s rise as a global superpower.”
Imagine trying to explain all of this to officials abroad. I’m imagining a conversation that would unfold something like this:
“You have a Senate that’s responsible for approving these officials before they’re able to take office.”
“Right.”
“And a majority of the Senate supports these nominees.”
“Yep, that’s correct, too.”
“But they’re nevertheless stuck, and your government is still filled with vacancies, even in matters related to your own country’s foreign policy and national security.”
“Exactly.”








