By

Lucy Madison /

CBS News/ January 29, 2013, 4:41 PM

Senate confirms Kerry as secretary of state

After 28 years in the Senate, one failed presidential bid, and four years as chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, John Kerry, D-Mass., was formally confirmed this afternoon to succeed Hillary Clinton as secretary of state, sailing through the Senate confirmation process in a matter of days and receiving near-unanimous approval from his colleagues for the job.

Kerry, whose nomination was announced last month, was approved by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee -- on which he served for the past 28 years -- with a swift, unanimous voice vote this morning. This afternoon, the full Senate voted to approve his nomination by a vote of 94-3, with one senator voting present: Kerry. The three "nay" votes were Sens. John Cornyn, R-Texas; Ted Cruz, R-Texas; James Inhofe, R-Okla.

Kerry could be sworn into office as early as Friday, which is also Clinton's last day on the job.

The longtime Massachusetts senator has faced little opposition in his bid for the top job at the State Department: Before his nomination in December, as a handful of Republican senators raised questions about the potential nomination of U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice, some on the right actively started suggesting Kerry as an alternate candidate. Rice ultimately withdrew her name from consideration for the job due to protracted criticism over comments she made about Benghazi, and Mr. Obama tapped Kerry as the nominee about a week later.

Debate on the Senate floor today hardly qualified as such: Most of the senators spoke highly of Kerry, offering up personal anecdotes and praising his experience. Even the committee's ranking Republican said he was "happy" for Kerry's good fortune.

"I know a lot of people think that because of the way partisan politics are here in Washington, that sometimes we can't be happy for someone on the other side of the aisle when they do well, and nothing could be further from the truth," said Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn. "I don't know of anybody who's lived a life that has been more oriented towards ultimately being Secretary of State than John Kerry. And for that, I also am happy for him and his family and the fact that very soon he's going to be able to express himself on behalf of our nation in this way."

Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., who has been leading the Senate Foreign Relations Committee proceedings during the process in Kerry's place, expressed his confidence in Kerry's ability to represent the nation on the world stage.

"As a senator, as a member of this committee, and as a chairman, John has already built strong relationships with leaders across the world, which will allow him to step seamlessly into the role of secretary of state," said Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., on the Senate floor. "Senator Kerry will need no introduction to the world's political and military leaders and will begin day one fully conversant not only with the intricacies of U.S. foreign policy but able to act on a multitude of international stages."

In confirmation hearings last week in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Kerry laid out his vision for U.S. diplomacy on the world stage, and spoke urgently about the role he believes the American economy plays in its diplomacy efforts. He also shot down suggestions that there was any "daylight" between his and Clinton's governing philosophies.

Clinton, meanwhile, called him the "right choice" to take her place.

Once sworn in to the president's cabinet, Kerry will officially abandon his Massachusetts seat. According to a report yesterday from the Boston Globe, a special election to fill his spot has already been set for June 25.

© 2013 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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    Lucy Madison is a political reporter for CBSNews.com.

23 Comments Add a Comment
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SlimeBagObama says:
Another Joe Biden look a like.
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bobnjersey says:
[This is the guy who is married to the heiress to the Heinz fortune. He was caught a couple of years ago, get this, parking his yacht in an adjoining state to avoid paying luxury taxes in the state that he was a senator. It was in the news for about one day.]
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it was rhode island ... part of the united states ... not part of the cayman islands ... like some unnamed politicos use for hiding their assets.
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Gecko5 replies:
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TimeToRetire - Let me get this straight, you are opposed to an American citizen exercising legal options to minimize his personal tax burdan. You must be a flaming liberal right?
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lgccac says:
" The three "nay" votes were Sens. John Cornyn, R-Texas; Ted Cruz, R-Texas; James Inhofe, R-Okla."

Makes me proud to be a Texan.
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Ulgnud says:
Just when we thought we were rid of this lout.
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larry2012 replies:
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The payoff for playing the patsy for GW Bush so he could get elected.
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calif7 says:
Ted Cruz votes nay. Over the weekend he rips both Kerry and Hagel for being anti-military. Cruz is just another chicken hawk who never put his own ass in the line of fire like Kerry and Hagel did. Cruz will be an embarrassment to both Texas and the USA.
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rememberwhatbushdid replies:
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He already is. His state will ultimately elect a true Latino/Hispanic, not a crass, opportunistic puppet of a dying GOP. This guy needs to travel in different circles. He is so far outside the mainstream of both American and Latino/Hispanic thought.
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hbullis says:
Marvelous...I feel so much better he's in...
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TimeToRetire says:
This is the guy who is married to the heiress to the Heinz fortune. He was caught a couple of years ago, get this, parking his yacht in an adjoining state to avoid paying luxury taxes in the state that he was a senator. It was in the news for about one day.
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1pheasant1 replies:
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No wonder the Tea Sippers love him.
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thefatcat2 says:
..HOW MANY TIMES DID JOHN KERRY TEAR DOWN THE U.S. MILITARY
In Front of the Entire World.
Time After Time. No Wonder The Democrat Party Loves John Kerry.
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Mike239239 replies:
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By tear down the U.S military you must mean serving honorably and then pointing out the many many lies the politicians were spewing out about the civil war in vietnam so there corporate masters could make a fortune while costing 10's of thousands of American lives.
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ssmith1965 says:
One of the first hotspots Kerry will have to deal with is North Korea. One never knows what North Korea is going to do next. Their leaders believe in unicorns and have access to nuclear weapons. Yikes. Good luck with that Mr. Kerry.

@parkthrillers
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hypnotoad72 says:
This is what bugs me:

In 2004, he should have been able to mop the floor with Bush. Indeed, Bush asked a couple of questions he shouldn't have, of which Kerry should have been able to use in order to win what should have been a slam dunk election.

But that's the past. Let's see how the present and future turn out.
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