GOP Senate Makes Big Move For Trump Over Dem Objections

Senate Republicans took a significant step this week toward addressing the backlog of nominees put forward by President Donald Trump.
On Monday, the GOP confirmed 49 of Trump’s nominees, bringing the total number of his civilian nominations that are now finalized to 60%.
This marks the fourth time Republicans have confirmed a group of nominees since the Senate altered its rules last year.
The latest batch includes 20 different positions, comprising a dozen U.S. attorneys, several U.S. marshals, ambassadors, and members from various agencies, including the Departments of War, Transportation, and Energy, among others.
Senate Republicans are delivering major victories for President Trump, confirming hundreds of his nominees at a record pace and dismantling the massive backlog deliberately created by Democrats in the early months of the second Trump administration.
As of late June 2026, the Senate has confirmed more than 500 of Trump’s nominees, with the 500th milestone celebrated just days ago.
This comes after Republicans rammed through procedural changes in September 2025 to overcome unprecedented Democratic obstruction that had stalled the process for months.
In a decisive move last fall, Senate Republicans invoked the “nuclear option” to allow batches of lower-level executive nominees to be confirmed by simple majority vote rather than forcing time-wasting individual roll calls.
The first major test occurred in September 2025, when the chamber confirmed 48 Trump picks in a single vote.
That was followed by even larger packages, including a sweeping 107-nominee bloc in October and additional tranches of nearly 50 at a time.
By the end of 2025 alone, Republicans had pushed through 417 confirmations—surpassing former President Joe Biden’s entire first-year total and marking one of the fastest starts in modern history.
The changes allowed the GOP to clear a backlog that had ballooned to nearly 150 pending nominees over the summer due to Democratic delays.
“Despite historic obstruction, Senate Republicans are getting President Trump’s team in place and restoring the Senate’s ability to advise and consent,” Thune and GOP leaders have repeatedly emphasized.
Democrats blocked routine voice votes and unanimous consent agreements that past presidents from both parties relied upon, forcing lengthy procedural fights even on noncontroversial picks.
Senate GOP Whip John Barrasso called it “Trump derangement syndrome on steroids.”
The confirmed nominees span critical roles: ambassadors, sub-Cabinet officials at agencies like Defense, State, Homeland Security, and Energy, plus key positions in labor, environment, and nuclear security.
High-profile early wins included full Cabinet confirmations (all 22 requiring Senate approval wrapped up by mid-September 2025) and a steady stream of judicial appointments advancing through the Judiciary Committee.
Recent action remains brisk. In May 2026, another 49 nominees advanced, covering ambassadors and mid-level agency roles.
As of early June, only a handful of civilian nominations remained on the executive calendar, effectively eliminating the backlog that once threatened to hamstring the administration.
Democrats have protested the rules change, arguing it weakens oversight, but it has not slowed down Republicans.
Trump continues to emphasize the urgency of confirming his judicial nominees.
“We have rogue judges that are criminals. They’re criminals — what they do to our country. The decisions they hand down have hurt our country,” the president said in March.
Trump highlighted the issue as a key reason for rapidly confirming strong conservative judges to counter activist rulings.
Trump has repeatedly stressed that Senate Republicans must move fast on his nominees to “take back the courts” from left-wing influence, calling delays “unacceptable” and warning that unfilled seats allow “radical judges” to undermine America First policies on borders, elections, and regulations.
Earlier this year, Trump again urged the Senate to confirm his picks “immediately,” arguing that every confirmed judge strengthens the rule of law and prevents the kind of judicial activism he says plagued previous administrations.