WASHINGTON—The Democratic Caucus of the Senate on Feb. 6 delayed the Senate Judiciary Committee from voting to advance to the Senate floor President Donald Trump’s nomination of Kash Patel to be the Director of the FBI.
Patel’s past commentary has attracted criticism from Democrats, who said he may use the FBI for retribution against Trump’s political rivals.
In response, Patel has repeatedly said he has no intention of doing that.
“There will be no politicization at the FBI. There will be no retributive actions taken by any FBI should I be confirmed as the FBI director,” he said at the first formal hearing on his nomination on Jan. 30.
“Mr. Patel was wholly unwilling to answer questions posed by members of the Committee relating to his grand jury testimony and the circumstances that led him to assert his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination [during the proceedings],” the signatories wrote.
On Jan. 30, Patel sat for his nomination hearing by the committee and fielded questions from senators for more than five hours.
“Republicans extended this courtesy ... even when very controversial nominees were on the agenda,” he said.
Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), who is the committee’s ranking Democrat member, said in response: “This is an extraordinary nomination.”
He also criticized Patel’s involvement in the promotion of musical performances by inmates incarcerated in relation to the breach of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, known as the “J6 Prison Choir.”
The Democratic signatories, led by Durbin, alleged in the letter that Patel included “apparent falsehoods in his testimony, under oath, during his confirmation hearing” and that the nominee must offer clarifications.
The letter also demanded that Patel appear before the committee to address the recent dismissal of career officials by the Trump administration at the FBI, as well as Patel’s statements before a grand jury impaneled to indict Trump in 2023 on charges of mishandling classified documents, which were dismissed after his election.
The hold means that a vote on Patel’s nomination may be delayed until at least Feb. 13.