Trump labor secretary nominee faces some GOP skepticism ahead of her hearing

Washington-The Senate, led by Republicans, is scheduled to hold a session on Wednesday, to President Donald Trump’s candidate for the Minister of Labor, Lori Chavez-Dumr.
Chavez-Dyderimer, a former member of Congress from Oregon, who served one period, is An unconventional choice for the head of the Republican Party. It supported a draft law called the Professional Law, which is a top priority in trade unions, and is supported by the Teamsters Federation.
“Persons working for a person with their experience in leading the agency in charge of protecting workers, creating good trade union jobs, and rebuilding the middle class in our nation,” General President Sean M. O’Brien, who spoke at the Republican National Congress last year and said in a statement. “The Teamsters team is grateful to President Trump for the situation of American workers first by nominating Representative Chavez-Dimer for this important role.”
This file fell in hot water with many Republicans in the Senate, who strongly oppose the professional law and their children. Careful eyes on Trump’s choice“I will not support her,” said Senator Rand Paul, R-Ky. , For NBC News in late January. “I am the national spokesman and author of the draft law on work. Its support for the professional law, which will not only oppose the national right to work, but will rule out the law of the state to the right to work-I think it is not a good thing.”
Paul predicted last month that she would lose 15 Republican votes. He is on the Senate, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, which maintains a session on Wednesday. The Republican Party has a majority of 11-10 in the committee, which means that if Paul votes against it, Chavez-Ramir will need democratic votes to obtain a positive committee’s vote.
Currently, Democrats maintain their powder.
Senator Marcin Mullen, R. Oker, said that he would present Chavez-Dimer in the session, and expected that the leaders of the Republican Senate Party will maintain a vote on the ground even if Paul made a committee.
“It is great,” he said, adding that while Paul is “difficult”, he is the only Republican currently in this camp. “He has the right to have his opinion on that. What he might not understand is that this President Trump grew our party. He brought the unions.”
“I also made it clear that she is working in the will of the United States, which is his policies that she will set,” Moulin said on Tuesday. “We will not agree on every issue, but you know, my wife and my wife are 27 years old, and we still do not agree on every issue. But you can work after these and still have a good relationship.”
Republican leaders of the Senate did not say whether Chavez-Wirimer will get a floor vote if it failed in the committee.
Senator Bernie Sanders, I-VT, a member of the Assistant Committee, told NBC News last week that he met Chevies-Darmeer. But he will not say if he supports her.
Senator Bill Cassidy, R. La, said. And who heads the committee, the Republicans-among them-find some of its previous positions “a problem”. But he said that this would not be the decisive factor for him.
Cassidy recently said: “Put this way: it takes the direction of the president, and not from its previous record of the vote,” Cassidy said recently.
Another case may appear in its hearing: Shavez-Tremer told the committee working in the family planning clinic in its early twenties, NBC News mentioned Last week.