WASHINGTON — President Obama plans to nominate Sen. Judd Gregg as commerce secretary today, the White House confirmed Monday as the New Hampshire Republican disclosed an apparent deal to keep his seat out of Democratic hands "I have made it clear to the Senate leadership on both sides of the aisle and to the governor that I would not leave the Senate if I felt my departure would cause a change in the makeup of the Senate," Gregg said in a statement. The deal would give Obama his top choice for the position.
Republicans get to keep Gregg's seat for two more years, retaining the crucial 41 Senate seats they need to filibuster majority Democrats.
And Democrats, who control 56 seats and caucus with two independents, stand a better chance of flipping Gregg's seat into their ranks in two years by running a candidate against his rookie replacement or an empty seat than Gregg himself.
The White House tried to stay out of the back and forth. But officials there did nothing to squelch the expectation that Gregg would be nominated to the post.
"Obviously, the president has great respect for Senator Gregg," White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said Monday. "I'm not going to get into personnel announcements before we are there."
Getting to a deal took days of negotiating after it became known last week that Obama was considering appointing the former Budget Committee chairman from New Hampshire to his Cabinet.
Gregg would become the third Republican in the Cabinet. The deal spares him blame for delivering Democrats complete control of the Senate and a re-election campaign in Democratic-leaning New Hampshire.
Lynch's agreement, meanwhile, shores up his bipartisan credentials at a time when he's confronting a decades-old budget crisis at home.
The Republican expected to be named to Gregg's seat is Bonnie Newman, who served as Gregg's chief of staff during his time in the House. Newman is a veteran of the Reagan White House. Under the deal, she would not run in the 2010 election.
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Associated Press Writers Philip Elliott and Ben Feller in Washington and Norma Love and Holly Ramer in Concord, N.H., contributed to this report.
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