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Cruz Criticizes Lynch, Skips AG Confirmation Vote

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz delivered an impassioned speech on the Senate floor against confirming Loretta Lynch, calling her unsuitable to be attorney general.

Then he was the lone senator to skip the confirmation vote.

"We have a nominee who has told the United States Senate she is unwilling to impose any limits whatsoever on the authority of the President of the United States," Cruz said. "In the next 20 months, we are sadly going to see more and more lawlessness, more recklessness, more abuse of power, more executive lawlessness."

Cruz said that based on Lynch's answers at her confirmation hearing, in which she supported President Barack Obama's executive actions on immigration, "in my opinion render her unsuitable for confirmation as attorney general of the United States."

He concluded his remarks at 11:23 a.m. EDT and cast a procedural vote against moving ahead on her nomination. When the roll was called at 1:37 p.m. for the final vote, Cruz was absent.

The Senate confirmed Lynch 56-43, with 10 Republicans joining 44 Democrats and two independents in backing President Barack Obama's nominee.

The Texas senator's office argued that the procedural vote was more important.

"Senator Cruz voted no on cloture which was the vote that mattered," said his spokeswoman, Amanda Carpenter. "His opposition to the nominee is clear and he has encouraged his Republican colleagues to stop the nomination at every stop in the process."

Cruz also had a campaign fundraiser in Dallas on Thursday night, according to his campaign website.

It was the second day in a row that Cruz had missed a major Senate tally. On Wednesday, he was absent for the vote on a bill expanding law enforcement tools to target sex traffickers and creating a new fund to help victims. That bill passed 99-0.

(© Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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