Three US military service secretaries have criticized Republican Senator Tommy Tuberville for his ongoing hold on senior military nominations, accusing him of aiding communist and autocratic regimes and damaging national security.
Pentagon leaders are intensifying their campaign to pressure Senator Tommy Tuberville into releasing a nine-month hold on senior military nominations, which they argue is harming national security and aiding autocratic regimes.
Senator Tommy Tuberville, a first-term Republican from Alabama, has single-handedly put a hold on the promotions and nominations of senior U.S. military officers for the past seven months, causing significant disruptions and undermining national security, all in an effort to oppose the Defense Department's policy of paying for female military personnel to travel across state lines for legal abortions.
Republican Rep. Michael McCaul criticizes Sen. Tommy Tuberville's blockage of military nominations, stating that it is paralyzing the Department of Defense and hindering military readiness.
Senate Republicans are urging Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer to vote on President Biden's military nominations despite Sen. Tommy Tuberville's hold on nominations and promotions, which is in protest of the Pentagon's new abortion policy.
Former Vice President Mike Pence commends Senator Tommy Tuberville for blocking military appointments in response to the Pentagon's controversial abortion policy, stating that the Pentagon should stand down and that he will remove "woke business" from the military if elected President.
Senator Tommy Tuberville plans to force a one-off vote to confirm Gen. Eric Smith as the new commandant for the Marine Corps while maintaining his blockade on over 300 military promotions.
Alabama Sen. Tommy Tuberville and fellow GOP senators may force a procedural vote on the Marine Corps commandant nominee in a breach of Senate protocol to break the Senate's gridlock on stalled military nominees and shift the blame onto Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer.
Senator Tommy Tuberville plans to break his blockade of military promotions by forcing a vote to appoint a new Marine Commandant, preventing over 300 officers from being promoted this year.
The Senate confirmed Air Force Gen. C.Q. Brown as the military's top officer in a surprise vote, but Sen. Tommy Tuberville's blockade is still leaving over 300 senior officers in limbo.
Air Force Gen. C.Q. Brown, nominee for chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has overcome a hold placed by Sen. Tommy Tuberville and been confirmed by the Senate, but there are still hundreds of military promotions awaiting confirmation due to the same hold.
Sen. Tommy Tuberville's hold on military promotions has led to the Senate approving only three out of over 300 nominations, leaving the future of many top defense officials uncertain.
Alabama Sen. Tommy Tuberville voted against the nomination of the Pentagon's next Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman, Air Force Gen. Charles "CQ" Brown Jr., citing objections to his efforts to promote racial diversity and equal opportunity in the military.
Sen. Tommy Tuberville continues to block military nominations over the Biden administration's abortion policy, even amidst the crisis in Israel, insisting that Democrats must move top nominees individually until the Pentagon changes its travel cost policy for troops seeking abortion across state lines.
Despite the ongoing war in Israel, GOP Senator Tommy Tuberville maintains his block on military promotions until the Pentagon's abortion policy is changed, causing a delay in confirming over 300 nominees and hindering the appointment of military leaders during the crisis.