The Senate Intelligence Committee will hold a hearing next week on Jay Clayton’s nomination to serve as director of national intelligence — paving the way for replacing the controversial acting director Bill Pulte and clearing the way for an extension of a lapsed spy authority.
Committee Chair Tom Cotton officially scheduled the confirmation hearing for July 15. The Arkansas Republican had originally intended to convene Clayton’s hearing last month, but those plans were derailed when President Donald Trump announced the confirmation process for Clayton would not go forward until James McDonald’s nomination to succeed Clayton as the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York was approved.
Trump appeared to come around late last week, telling reporters that Clayton’s hearing would take place in two weeks. A spokesperson for Cotton didn’t comment at the time, but a person with knowledge of the matter, granted anonymity to disclose private scheduling, told POLITICO Cotton was aiming to hold a hearing on July 15.
Republicans want to confirm Clayton before leaving for a weeks-long break at the start of August and hope that moving his nomination will break a stalemate over a three-year extension of Section 702 authority of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. Democrats have said they won’t vote for the reauthorization until Pulte, a Trump ally who they deem as unqualified, is removed from the post.
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