NewsJanuary 3, 2017

WASHINGTON -- Congress ushers in a new era of all-Republican rule. At noon today, with plenty of pomp and pageantry, members of the 115th Congress will be sworn in, with a GOP intent on unraveling eight years of President Barack Obama's Democratic agenda and targeting massive legacy programs from Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon B. Johnson such as Social Security and Medicare...

By DONNA CASSATA ~ Associated Press
Paul Ryan
Paul Ryan

WASHINGTON -- Congress ushers in a new era of all-Republican rule.

At noon today, with plenty of pomp and pageantry, members of the 115th Congress will be sworn in, with a GOP intent on unraveling eight years of President Barack Obama's Democratic agenda and targeting massive legacy programs from Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon B. Johnson such as Social Security and Medicare.

In the election, Republicans kept their grip on the House and outmaneuvered the Democrats for a slim majority in the Senate. In less than three weeks, on the West Front of the Capitol, Chief Justice John Roberts will administer the presidential oath to Donald Trump, the GOP's newfound ally.

First up for Republicans is repeal and delay of the health-care law, expediting the process for scrapping Obama's major overhaul but holding off on some changes for up to four years. The tax code is in the cross-hairs. Conservatives want to scuttle rules on the environment and undo financial regulations created in the aftermath of the 2008 economic meltdown, arguing they are too onerous for businesses to thrive.

Here are a few things to know about Congress:

By the numbers

Vice President Joe Biden, in one of his final official acts, will administer the oath to 27 returning senators and seven new ones. Republicans will have a 52-48 advantage in the Senate.

There will be 21 women, of whom 16 are Democrats and five Republicans; three African-Americans; and four Hispanics.

Across the Capitol, the House is expected to re-elect Rep. Paul Ryan as Speaker. Once sworn in, Ryan will administer the oath to the House members.

The GOP will hold a hefty 241-194 majority in the House, including 52 freshmen -- 27 Republicans and 25 Democrats.

Confirming Cabinet

The Senate will exercise its advice and consent role and consider nominations of 15 department secretaries and six people tapped by Trump to lead agencies or serve in roles with Cabinet-level status, such as the EPA and U.N. ambassador.

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Democrats won't make it easy.

Several in the party have been critical of several Trump choices, from Rick Perry, who forgot during the 2012 presidential campaign the Energy Department was the one he wanted to eliminate, to Treasury pick Steve Mnuchin, the former Goldman Sachs executive whom Democrats have dubbed the "foreclosure king" for his stake in OneWest Bank whick profited from the foreclosure crisis.

High court vacancy

Adding to the drama of the new Congress will be confirmation hearings for Trump's nominee for the Supreme Court.

Justice Antonin Scalia died in February, and Republicans refused to consider Obama's nominee, Merrick Garland, insisting the next president should fill the high court vacancy that's lasted more than 10 months.

Trump released a list of potential choices during the campaign that included Utah Sen. Mike Lee, who clerked for Justice Samuel Alito.

Since the election, the president-elect also has met with Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who clerked for former Chief Justice William Rehnquist, prompting talk about a possible nomination for the onetime political rival.

Trump has said he wants to nominate a justice who would help overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 decision that legalized abortion. Cruz and Lee would fulfill that pledge.

New face in leadership

The point man for Senate Democrats is Brooklyn-born Chuck Schumer, who will be a chief antagonist to fellow New Yorker Trump.

Schumer succeeds Nevada's Harry Reid, who retired after five terms, and joins Congress' top leaders -- Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and Speaker Ryan -- in what is certain to be tough negotiations next year on spending and policies.

Russian hacking

The first public hearing on the intelligence community's assessment that Russia interfered in the U.S. election is Thursday in the Senate Armed Services Committee, with James Clapper, the director of national intelligence, set to testify. Expect individual panels to investigate, but not a special, high-profile select committee. McConnell has rejected that bipartisan call.

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