Senate confirms Joint Chiefs chair despite Tuberville’s stalling

The Senate on Wednesday confirmed Gen. CQ Brown as the next chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, succeeding Gen. Mark Milley when he retires at the end of this month.

General Brown’s confirmation by a vote of 83-11, months after President Joe Biden nominated him for the post, comes as Democrats try to maneuver around the hundreds of nominations that Alabama Sen. Tommy Tuberville placed on the Pentagon’s abortion policy . The Senate is also expected this week to confirm Gen. Randy George as Army chief of staff and Gen. Eric Smith as commander of the U.S. Marine Corps.

Mr. Tuberville has blocked the Senate from the routine process of approving military nominations in batches, frustrating Democrats who have said they would not go through the time-consuming process of putting individual nominations to a vote. More than 300 nominees are still stuck in Mr Tuberville’s blockade, and it would take months to confirm them one by one.