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Senate confirms Acosta as Trump’s secretary of Labor

Alex Acosta testifies on Capitol Hill in March. He was confirmed as secretary of Labor in a Senate vote Thursday.
Alex Acosta testifies on Capitol Hill in March. He was confirmed as secretary of Labor in a Senate vote Thursday.
(Manuel Balce Ceneta / AP)
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The Senate on Thursday confirmed Alex Acosta as secretary of Labor, filling out President Trump’s Cabinet.

The 60-38 vote confirms Acosta to the post. Once sworn as the nation’s 27th secretary of Labor, the son of Cuban immigrants will lead a sprawling agency that enforces more than 180 federal laws covering about 10 million employers and 125 million workers.

Acosta has been a federal prosecutor, a civil rights chief at the Justice Department and a member of the National Labor Relations Board. He will arrive at the top post with relatively little clear record on some of the top issues facing the administration over key pocketbook issues, such as whether to expand the pool of American workers eligible for overtime pay.

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Acosta wasn’t Trump’s first choice for the job. Former fast-food CEO Andrew Puzder withdrew his name from consideration last month, on the eve of his confirmation vote, after becoming a political headache for the new administration.

Puzder acknowledged having hired a housekeeper not authorized to work in the U.S. and paying the related taxes years later — after Trump nominated him — and came under fire from Democrats for other issues related to his company and his private life.

Acosta’s ascension would come at a key moment for Trump, just two days before he reaches the symbolic 100-day marker. The White House has sought to cross the threshold with its own list of Trump’s accomplishments.

Labor secretary is the last Cabinet post for Trump to fill. Trump’s choice for U.S. trade representative, a job considered Cabinet-level, is awaiting a Senate vote.

From the beginning, Acosta’s was a quiet march to confirmation that stood out because it didn’t attract the deep partisan battles faced by some of Trump’s other nominees, including Education Secretary Betsy DeVos and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. Justice Neil Gorsuch’s nomination provoked such a fight that majority Senate Republicans used the “nuclear option” to remove the 60-vote filibuster barrier for Supreme Court picks.

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