The Senate is expected to
confirm Jeh Johnson, the nominee to be secretary of Homeland Security, as early
as next week, and is also likely to take up the more controversial candidacy of
Alejandro Mayorkas to become the department’s deputy secretary.
After a contentious debate,
Mayorkas won the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee’s
approval on Dec. 11 despite calls from the panel’s top Republican for a delay
until the DHS Inspector General completes an inquiry into his handling of a
foreign investor visa program.
Mayorkas has been serving
as head of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), a part of DHS, since
2009, after winning unanimous Senate confirmation. President Obama proposed
promoting him to the deputy secretary’s slot in June.
But the nomination ran into
opposition following disclosure of the IG’s investigation.
The probe reportedly
centers on a program known as “EB-5,” which gives visas and a path to permanent
resident status to foreigners who make significant job-creating investments in
the United
States .
The program, run by USCIS, has been dogged by problems.
According to committee
chairman Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., one complaint alleges that Mayorkas
improperly intervened on behalf of an application tied to a company in which
Terry McAuliffe, a major Democratic fundraiser now governor-elect of Virginia , was an investor. The company ultimately did not
get what it wanted, Carper said.
At a July hearing, Mayorkas
labeled the allegations “unequivocally false.” During 16 years of government
service, he said, “I have never based my decisions on who brings a case but
rather upon the fact and the law.”
Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla.,
said the IG’s investigation has since expanded to include whistleblower
allegations that Mayorkas sought to obstruct congressional investigations and
intimidated employees who questioned agency policies.
With the findings expected
in a few months, Coburn said, “we’re going to make a less-than-informed vote on
Mr. Mayorkas, and so will the rest of our colleagues be forced to make an
ill-informed vote on the Senate floor.”
Carper said the inspector
general has so far found no evidence of criminal wrongdoing by Mayorkas or
anyone else at DHS.
Majority Democrats on the
panel all voted in favor of Mayorkas; Coburn and other GOP members voted
“present” to signal their opposition to going ahead. The deputy secretary’s job
has been unfilled for almost eight months since Jane Lute stepped down.
Senate leaders have not yet
set a date for a final confirmation vote for Mayorkas.
Originally published in The Federal Times
Ben Ferro
benferro@InsideINS.com
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