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Trump's cabinet braces for confirmation 'murder boards'

The first trickle in a cascade of confirmation hearings to staff Donald Trump's new administration starts today, as Republicans fend off accusations they're trying to 'jam through' the vetting before required screening.

Alabama senator Jeff Sessions, retired marine general John Kelly among 1st nominees to testify

Retired U.S. Marine general John F. Kelly is among the first cabinet nominees set to testify beginning Tuesday. (Rhona Wise/Reuters)

The first cascade of confirmation hearings to staff Donald Trump's new administration starts today, as Republicans fend off accusations they're trying to "jam through" the vetting before required screening.

At least eight hearings are scheduled this week for the president-elect's cabinet picks to face tough Senate panels known as"murder boards," a term that originated in the U.S. military.Four are slated for Wednesday alone, the same day as a vote on a Republican budget measure that wouldrepeal key tenets of the Affordable Care Act.

It's also the same day Trump has scheduled his first press conference in about 170 days. Democrats denounced the packed hearings lineup as a calculated push to bury potentially bad press in a news avalanche before Trump takes the oath of office.

Attorney General-designate Senator Jeff Sessions cheers on the crowd during a Donald Trump rally, Dec. 17, 2016, in Mobile, Alabama. Sessions is known for hardline anti-illegal immigration positions in Congress. (Brynn Anderson/Associated Press)

The timetable angered Senate minority leader CharlesSchumer, who admonished Republican senators for trying to send the confirmations through in an "unprecedented" rush,ignoring concerns raised by the Office of Government Ethics about incomplete ethics and background checks.

"Senate Republicans should heed the advice of this independent office and stop trying to jam through unvetted nominees," Schumer wrote in a letter.

The schedule (subject to change) this week includes:

  • Alabama senator Jeff Sessions, Attorney General
  • John F. Kelly, Secretary of Homeland Security
  • RexTillerson, Secretary of State
  • MikePompeo, CIA director
  • ElaineChao, Transportation Secretary
  • Wilbur Ross, Commerce Secretary
  • JamesMattis, Defence Secretary
  • Ben Carson, Housing and Urban Development Secretary

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Expect 'temper tantrums'

Tuesday's hearings will open with testimony from Sessions, an Alabama senator liked by his peers across political aisles. But Sessions is burdened by allegations of racist comments raised31 years ago, when he was deemedunfit for a federal judgeship.

Testimonies that led to the rejection of his nomination allege that Sessions described a white civil-rights attorney as atraitor to his race for defending a black client, joked about supporting the KKK, used theN-word, and called a black assistant U.S. Attorney "boy" on multiple occasions.

Sessions said those hearings distorted views of his character, and were inaccurate.

HoganGidley, anadviser to former Republican governor of Arkansas MikeHuckabee, expects "leniency" for Sessions from Senate colleagues, as "one of their own."

Former Goldman Sachs executive Steve Mnuchin is president-elect Donald Trump's pick for Treasury Secretary. (Evan Vucci/Associated Press)

"But I do think there will be plenty of attempts to paint him wrongly as some type of racist," saysGidley, who supported Trump in the election.

The South Carolina-based conservative strategist believes the ultimate play is to discredit Trump."They'll use this stage of televised confirmation hearings to throw temper tantrums and embarrass the nominees and, by extension, embarrass the person who nominated them."

Tuesday will also include testimony from Kelly, the retired marine general vying for the Homeland Security post. He will likely be asked to defend his opposition to closing Guantanamo Bayas well as the detention centre's reputation for its treatment of detainees. Kelly can expect to be questioned on his approach to combating terrorism and ISIS.

Democrats demand delay

Meanwhile, Democrats are demanding a delay in the proceedings, reasoning that the usual ethics and background disclosures have yet to be obtained for all nominees before the hearings.

Former Labour Secretary Elaine Chao met with the president-elect at Trump Tower in New York on Nov. 21, 2016. (Carolyn Kaster/Associated Press)

They could try to stall hearings by extending the meetings, calling for additional review time to scrutinize nominees' financial recordsand pushing a final vote back by a week, says JimManley, who advisedformer Democratic Senate minority leader Harry Reid. (Wednesday's plannedconfirmation hearing for Betsy DeVos for Secretary of Education has been postponed until next week, for instance, as Democrats sought more time toreview financial holdings and potential conflicts of interest.)

The tactics will likely only delay the inevitable. Trump's picks will likely be confirmed.

"There'sbeen an idea on Capitol Hill that presidents, at the end of the day, deserve to have their cabinet nominees in place, absent some serious allegation,"Manleysays.

Bad blood may still linger following U.S. PresidentBarackObama'selection win in 2008, when Senate Republicans didn't extend that same courtesy toObamafor executive and judicial branch nominees.

In a tongue-in-cheek tweet Monday,Schumerreferenceda 2009 letter from the Republican leadershipappealing to the Democrats to provide thestandard background checks forObama'snominees.

Schumer, requesting the same treatment now from the Republicans, appended that original letter, addressing it instead to Senate majority leaderMitchMcConnell from the Office of the Democratic leader.

"Senate Republicans abused the process" by refusing those picks,Manleysays. Fed up by the obstruction, Democrats voted in 2011 to weaken the filibuster rules so that only a simple majority of 51 rather than the 60 needed in asupermajority was sufficient for confirmations.

Now that the Republicans have a 52-seat majority in the Senate, that procedural change could shift advantage to the other side of the aisle.

Democrats and skeptical Republicans are expected to confront Trump's picks on issues like their apparent coziness with Russian officials (forTillerson);unsettled payment of millions in overdue election fines (forDeVos); plans to replaceObamacare(for Tom Price);and profiting from the 2008 housing collapse (for SteveMnuchin, the former GoldmanSachsexecutive tapped for Treasury Secretary).

Hearings a chance to 'get clarity'

Besides scrutinizing the nominees' backgrounds, Democrats will use the occasion to focus on the judgment of the incoming commander-in-chief, grilling his would-be staff on whether they agree with Trump's most radical ideas.

"This is not only going to be about holding their feet to the fire and discussing the agencies they've been nominated for," saysManley. "They're going to want to poke around and see where, and whether, they differ from Donald Trump himself."

Some of U.S. president-elect Donald Trump's cabinet nominees. Top, left to right: Wilbur Ross for Commerce Secretary; Jeff Sessions for Attorney General; James Mattis for Defence Secretary; Rick Perry for Energy Secretary; Scott Pruitt for Environmental Protection Agency administrator. Bottom, left to right: John F. Kelly for Department of Homeland Security Secretary; Tom Price for Health and Human Services Secretary; Betsy DeVos for Education Secretary; Ben Carson for Housing and Urban Development Secretary; Ryan Zinke for Interior Secretary. (Reuters)

The president-electhas been "all over the map" with his political views,Manleysays. The hearings should giveSenate Democrats a chance "to get clarity on where this administration intends to go on hot-button issues, including immigration and health care reform."

Trump's transition team has reportedly set up mock hearings in a federal building in Washington to prep his nominees.

Savvy nominees will avoid making "thoughtless statements or unauthorized policy statements," says GaryNordlinger, a politics professor at George Washington University.

And if someonefeels tempted tobloviateon a controversial topic? Robert Reich, the former labour secretary in the Bill Clinton administration,offerswisdom in ablog: Just resist.

"Say instead: 'I look forward to working with you on that, Senator.'"