When the Senate reached an agreement this week on confirmation votes for several executive-branch nominees, it’s safe to assume Republicans had to swallow hard before accepting Thomas Perez’s nomination to lead the Labor Department. Perez is arguably the most liberal member of President Obama’s second-term cabinet — even those who condemn the president from the left were thrilled with this pick — and GOP senators clearly hoped to defeat him.
They failed, of course, but not before a Senate vote that marked a historical first.
After a last-minute deal earlier this week to avert a showdown over filibuster rules, the Senate has confirmed Tom Perez as the next Secretary of Labor. The vote was 54-46.
Praising the vote, President Barack Obama said in a statement “I want to thank the Senate once again for agreeing to move forward on Tom and the other nominees who have waited far too long for the yes-or-no votes they deserve.”
So, what’s historically unusual about this? Take a look at the roll call for today’s vote and you’ll notice something interesting: literally every member of the Senate Democratic caucus voted for Perez and literally every member of the Senate Republican caucus voted against him.
When was the last time a cabinet nominee was confirmed on a strict party-line vote? According to the office of the Senate Historian, it’s never happened before. Ever.









