Journalism of Courage
Advertisement
Premium

US Senate Republicans are now in the mix for top posts in a Trump presidency

The list of eager Senate applicants for a job in a second Trump administration could be much longer if Trump triumphs this year.

TrumpRepublican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally. (AP photo)

After Donald Trump was elected president in 2016, he reached into the Senate for just one high-level member of his administration, picking Jeff Sessions of Alabama as attorney general and rewarding the first senator to endorse him when many other Republicans had kept the candidate at arm’s length.

The list of eager Senate applicants for a job in a second Trump administration could be much longer if Trump triumphs this year. Unlike in 2016, when many Senate Republicans considered Trump an unknown quantity, nearly all of them are fully on board and might jump at the chance for an administration gig — even if they just got to the Senate.

At least two Senate Republicans — JD Vance of Ohio and Marco Rubio of Florida — are on the shortlist for the vice president slot, with Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina also having been vetted. Other GOP senators are being talked about for top posts in a Trump White House. It is a distinct change from 2016, when Trump and his advisers looked to the House, where Trump fervor ran much deeper, for political appointees.

“The Republican Conference right now from top to bottom is currently an all-star team,” said Sen. John Barrasso of Wyoming, the No. 3 Republican. “These folks are smart, and they are aggressive legislatively. I think it would be natural for President Trump to tap into all of this talent.”

The Senate has long been a spot for presidents to turn to when looking to assemble a governing team, with advantages for both a White House that gains Washington know-how and connections and senators looking for a different way to make an impact or just a dignified exit from Congress and its myriad frustrations.

According to the Senate Historical Office, more than 40 senators have resigned their seats for Cabinet posts, with the first being Samuel Dexter of Massachusetts, who was appointed secretary of war by President John Adams in 1800. The State Department has been the most popular stop, followed by the Treasury, Justice and Interior departments.

The election of Barack Obama in 2008 brought several Senate vacancies, including Obama’s seat in Illinois, Joe Biden’s seat in Delaware with his election as vice president, Hillary Clinton’s seat in New York after her confirmation as secretary of state and Ken Salazar’s seat in Colorado with his appointment as interior secretary.

Story continues below this ad

Sen. John Kerry followed them out the door after his confirmation to replace Clinton at the State Department in 2013.

“Only three decades after the people of Massachusetts first voted me into office, the people I work with in the Senate voted me out of it,” Kerry joked in his farewell after the Senate overwhelmingly approved his nomination.

But in 2017, Trump turned to the House rather than the Senate for his inner circle. Rep. Tom Price of Georgia was tapped for health secretary, Rep. Ryan Zinke of Montana for Interior and Rep. Mike Pompeo of Kansas for CIA director and later secretary of state.

In addition, Trump’s vice president, Mike Pence of Indiana, had a House background before he left to become governor of Indiana. Trump also came to rue his selection of Sessions, who recused himself from a Justice Department investigation into Russian ties to the Trump team, infuriating the president.

Story continues below this ad

Now, while some House members such as Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York, the No. 4 House Republican, are talked about as future Trump administration picks, the Senate is getting much more attention than it did in Trump’s first go-round.

Some of those being discussed as Trump appointees just arrived in Washington and had barely set up their offices before talking about leaving. It’s a switch, considering that Obama was considered dismissively by some of his colleagues to be a “drive-by” senator because he ran for the presidency after only four years in the Senate.

Besides Vance, other recently elected Republicans who have come up in discussions about joining a Trump administration include Sens. Bill Hagerty of Tennessee, who was elected in 2020 after serving as Trump’s ambassador to Japan, and Eric Schmitt of Missouri, elected in 2022 after a stint as state attorney general. Schmitt recently took part in a small Washington meeting with Trump to discuss policy issues in advance of Trump’s debate with President Joe Biden.

Vance has been perhaps the most open about his interest in being named Trump’s vice presidential nominee despite taking his Senate oath less than two years ago, giving him little time to build a record. Although he would gladly run for vice president, he still says his goal isn’t to make for the exits after such a short tenure.

Story continues below this ad

“I like being a senator,” Vance said recently on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” “I’m not trying to leave the United States Senate. It’s an honor to serve the people of Ohio. And, frankly, if you ask me, that’s where I expect to be in six months; that’s where I expect to be in a few years.”

Even if Rubio is not tapped as vice president, he would be expected to be a strong candidate for a Cabinet post, given his Senate experience in foreign policy and intelligence over three terms — though he did run against Trump for the Republican presidential nomination in 2016.

Also high on the list of Republican senators seen as future administration officials is Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, an Army combat veteran with a hawkish bent. Cotton, elected in 2014, is running to join the Senate Republican leadership but could prefer a Cabinet post as a quicker route to influence rather than enduring the slog rising to power in the Senate can entail.

While poaching from the Senate could result in some personnel changes and unanticipated campaigns, the senators being eyed all represent red states that are highly unlikely to provide opportunities for Democratic pickups.

Story continues below this ad

Anyone who is asked would certainly have to give it serious thought, Barrasso acknowledged.

“If the president of the United States and duty calls,” he said, “any senator would have to consider it.”

Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram

Tags:
  • donald trump US republicans
Edition
Install the Express App for
a better experience
Featured
Trending Topics
News
Multimedia
Follow Us
Express InvestigationJNU’s fault lines move from campus to court: University fights students and faculty
X