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GOP prevents vote on Hagel as Defense secretary

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Also Wednesday, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., who chairs the Senate Intelligence Committee, said she had postponed a vote expected as soon as Thursday on the nomination of John Brennan as CIA director.

Members of the committee had objected, Feinstein said without identifying them. She said she hoped to schedule a vote on Brennan, the White House adviser on counterterrorism, after a recess that ends Feb. 25.

Feinstein said committee rules allowed any member to delay a nomination vote. She also suggested that Brennan needed to satisfy requests for more information about September’s deadly terrorist attack on the U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya, and about secret Justice Department memos on targeted killings.

The fight to confirm Hagel reached a boiling point Tuesday during a meeting of the Armed Services Committee after newly elected Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, suggested without offering evidence that Hagel might have received compensation from foreign entities. Democrats maintained that Hagel had complied with all the established disclosure protocols, and several admonished Cruz for his comment.

The committee reported Hagel’s nomination favorably on a party-line vote, 14-11.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., another Hagel critic, said his desire to delay the vote was not just about Hagel’s qualifications but about extracting more information about President Barack Obama’s level of engagement after the raid in Libya, which killed the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans.

“We don’t have the information we need,” Graham said Wednesday. “And I am going to fight the idea of jamming somebody through until we get answers about what the president did personally about the Benghazi debacle.”

Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., Hagel’s chief ally in the Senate, said it was important to move quickly if senators were “to stay true to the traditions of this body and to the presumption that the president should be at least allowed to have his nominee voted up or down.”

The outgoing Defense secretary, Leon E. Panetta, was confirmed in 2011 by a vote of 100-0. In a final news conference Wednesday, the former California congressman said one of the chief disappointments of his tenure had been a deteriorating relationship with Congress.

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