US Senator Markwayne Mullin faced fiery questioning by the Senate committee that ultimately voted to advance his nomination to head the Department of Homeland Security

US Senator Markwayne Mullin faced fiery questioning by the Senate committee that ultimately voted to advance his nomination to head the Department of Homeland Security

US senators advanced President Donald Trump's pick to lead the Department of Homeland Security in a knife-edge committee vote Thursday, after a combative hearing exposed concerns about his temperament and policy agenda.

The Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee voted 8-7 to approve Senator Markwayne Mullin's nomination to lead the powerful agency responsible for carrying out Trump's high-profile immigration crackdown.

Republican leaders are eyeing a full Senate vote as early as next week, where he is expected to get an easier ride than he did in the committee.

The panel's Republican chairman Rand Paul had opposed the nomination, citing what he described as Mullin's "anger issues" and past inflammatory remarks. That left Mullin needing a Democrat to break ranks, and Pennsylvania centrist John Fetterman obliged.

The hearing on Wednesday -- the only formal hurdle before a floor vote -- quickly turned tense, with Paul confronting Mullin over past comments and questioning his temperament.

Mullin previously called Paul a "freaking snake" for breaking with Republicans on key votes, while Paul has accused the nominee of effectively excusing a 2017 assault in which the chairman was severely injured by a neighbor.

Mullin denies this -- saying he only sought to explain, not justify, the attack on Paul.

Democrats pressed Mullin over his record and the administration's immigration policies, expressing skepticism about his promises to chart a less controversial course than outgoing Secretary Kristi Noem, who was ousted after federal agents shot dead two American protesters during migrant roundups in Minnesota.

Mullin sought to reassure lawmakers by pledging a lower-profile approach to running the department, saying his goal was to avoid dominating headlines.

"My goal at six months is that we're not in the lead story every single day," he told senators. "My goal is for people to understand we're out there, we're protecting them."

He also signaled openness to requiring judicial warrants for immigration enforcement operations -- a potential shift from current policy and a key demand from Democrats in ongoing funding negotiations.

But those assurances did little to ease opposition.

Several Democrats said they would need to see concrete legislative changes before taking Mullin at his word, particularly as the department remains partially shut down amid a standoff over immigration enforcement.

DHS has been without full funding for more than a month and is grappling with mounting operational strain, including disruptions at airports.

ft/acb

Originally published on doc.afp.com, part of the BLOX Digital Content Exchange.

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