Biden’s nomination of California’s Julie Su as labor secretary advances

Julie Su’s nomination to become the nation’s secretary of labor once again advanced out of a U.S. Senate committee on Tuesday, Feb.  27, amid a year of congressional gridlock that has stalled President Joe Biden’s appointment of the former California labor secretary.

The party-line vote out of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions comes after Biden’s re-nomination of Su last month to become Biden’s secretary of labor, a role long opposed by Senate Republicans, but which on Tuesday moves the nomination to the Senate floor, according to Reuters.

“Her strong pro-worker track record and tireless dedication to working families across this country shows beyond a shadow of a doubt that she is the right person for the job,” said Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., chairman of the HELP Committee. “I urge my colleagues to support her nomination.”

Su’s path to the re-nomination was a path fraught with starts and stops and criticism from  Republicans.

She has served as acting secretary of labor since March 2023, stepping in when then-Labor Secretary Marty Walsh left to head the National Hockey League’s players’ union. Biden tapped her a year ago for the cabinet position, but that nomination was never voted on in the Senate and stalled out at the end of last year.

Meanwhile, as acting secretary, GOP members have increasingly called for her nomination to be rejected. As Reuters noted, the Labor Department has upset business interests by adopting a rule that could limit independent contracting. A proposal to expand mandatory overtime pay to millions of workers has also irked GOP lawmakers.

On Tuesday, ranking GOP committee member Bill Cassidy, R-La., echoed such criticism.

“Since Julie Su’s first nomination hearing, the concerns over her leadership of DOL have only grown,” he said. “Ms. Su has continued to build a troubling record as Acting DOL Secretary, implementing policies that promote large labor unions at the expense of workers and economic growth,” said Dr. Cassidy. “The HELP Committee should have been able to address these issues directly with Ms. Su to properly conduct its constitutional duty to oversee the president’s nominees. It is unacceptable that the HELP Chair denied committee members this opportunity.”

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