The Republicans have no spine. And the Democrats have no soul, no integrity and no love of country. Hagel is a nightmare and everybody knows it.
Kudos to Sen. John Cornyn (R., Texas), who voted against the motion to proceed, and was among the Republicans who continued to voice their opposition Tuesday. "We should not be installing a defense secretary who is obviously not qualified for the job and who holds dangerously misguided views," he said.
Once again, Arizona Sen. John McCain failed us. McCain voted more than a week ago to block Mr. Hagel's nomination but voted Tuesday to let the nomination proceed, brushing aside the filibuster as a minor delay.
Here are the craven quislings, including Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Kelly Ayotte (R-NH), Lamar Alexander (R-NE), Roy Blunt (R-MO) and Orrin Hatch (R-UT), who joined Democrats in breaking the filibuster today.
Republicans End Filibuster, Clearing the Way for Hagel to Be Confirmed The Wire
President Obama's nominee for secretary of defense had been held up by GOP senators with outstanding questions.
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The Senate got their successful cloture vote on Tuesday afternoon, finishing the filibuster of Chuck Hagel's nomination to be secretary of defense -- and clearing the way, at last, for a straight party-line vote on his confirmation. The vote was 71-27, easily clearing the 60-vote supermajority threshold. Hagel's nomination has been held up for nearly two weeks, after Republicans in the Senate blocked a previous cloture vote just before the recent Congressional recess. The delay gave conservatives another 12 days or so to hammer him and the president on their lack of support for Israel (or fake support from Hamas), among other things, but now that their point has sufficiently been made, or something, Hagel is ready to become the new head at the Pentagon. Even Hagel frenemies Senators Lindsey Graham and John McCain dropped their support of the filibuster, along with about a dozen other GOP members, giving Democrats well more than the 60 votes need to end the debate. Although those same members will probably all still vote against Hagel's nomination when the time comes.
The Senate will still have to go through the motions of a straight majority vote later today (the final is scheduled for 4:30 p.m.), but Hagel should have no problem passing that threshold since he's basically done it twice already. Leon Panetta, you're free to go.




