Source: Wash. Post
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/story/2009/02/04/ST2009020403880.htmlBy Michael A. Fletcher
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, February 5, 2009; A04
The nomination of Rep. Hilda L. Solis (D-Calif.) for labor secretary goes to a scheduled Senate committee vote today after a face-off with Republican lawmakers that highlights their disagreements with President Obama's labor policies.
Solis's refusal during her confirmation hearing last month to be pinned down on issues including the Employee Free Choice Act, which she previously co-sponsored in the House, and her view of ergonomic rules lifted during the Bush administration, led to threats from some GOP lawmakers to place a hold on her nomination that could lead to further delays once it was on the Senate floor.
Lawmakers also raised pointed questions about her work with American Rights at Work, a pro-labor group for which Solis serves as an unpaid treasurer. Some lawmakers questioned whether her position on a board that organization officials said meets only annually amounts to a lobbying role, something Solis has disputed.
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Senate GOP aides said that Solis's written answers seem to have satisfied Republican lawmakers and that they expect her to be confirmed. Still, the delay of Solis's confirmation is seen by some as an early skirmish in what is expected to be a contentious relationship between Obama's Labor Department and congressional Republicans. As a candidate, Obama was critical of the handling of labor issues by the Bush administration, saying it had a pro-business bias that led it to shirk many regulatory functions. Bush officials have said they sought industry cooperation with Labor Department rules, which they argue led to improved worker safety.
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The wrangling over Solis's nomination comes at a pivotal time for organized labor, which is in its strongest political position in many years, with a president and majorities in both chambers of Congress supportive of many of its top legislative priorities.
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Yesterday, organized labor turned up the pressure on Congress to consider the Employee Free Choice Act, which would make it easier for workers to organize unions. Workers gathered on Capitol Hill to begin delivering petitions with a reported 1.5 million signatures.
Pressure to oppose the measure is intense, as well. "This is the most unifying issue for business right now," said John Engler, president and chief executive of the National Association of Manufacturers.
With the last of Solis's answers submitted last week, Senate staffers said they expected her nomination to proceed to the floor for a full Senate vote shortly after the committee vote. "My sense is she has probably got the support to move on through the Senate," one GOP aide said.