This Week, US Republican Rand Paul addressed the Senate for thirteen hours - a mammoth attempt - ostensibly, to block the approval of President Barack Obama's pick to head the CIA.
In the end though, John Brennan, was comfortably approved by the Senate, despite persistent concerns over the secrecy and conduct of the US drone programme that he has largely overseen. It is estimated to have killed thousands in countries like Pakistan and Yemen.
Now several other appointments will have to be considered by Congress.
"It's clear that the Obama administration is strongly in favor of developing natural gas through hydrofracking. They are working with the industry, they are trying to put a sort of an environmental face on it."
- Rick Piltz, founder of Climate Science Watch
After weeks of speculation, this week Barack Obama named Gina McCarthy to lead the US environmental Protection Ageny. She is the former director's trusted deputy. McCarthy has made climate change a priority.
She has been praised by those who worked with her, especially on developing the US Environmental Protection Agency's mercury standards, which are estimated to prevent 11,000 premature deaths from poor air quality.
Obama has nominated MIT professor Ernest Moniz to run the Department of Energy. Moniz concluded that hydraulic fracturing, known as fracking, is a "bridge to a low carbon future", after he led a study funded by oil and gas companies.
And Mary Jo White is the president's choice for the Securities and Exchange Commission, which is supposed to reign in the excesses of Wall Street.
But as a million-dollar corporate lawyer, she has been on the other side of the table for many years, defending JP Morgan Chase and Bank of America. Her husband currently counts three big banks among his clients.
So what do these latest nominations say about President Obama's future policies?
Inside Story Americas, with presenter Shihab Rattansi, discusses with guests: Rick Piltz, the founder of Climate Science Watch and a former US official in the government's Climate Science program under George W Bush; and Ryan Grim, the Washington bureau chief for the Huffington Post.
Chavez: A talented pitcher?
Hugo Chavez, the late Venezuelan president, may have been a staunch critic of US policies but when it came to America's favorite past time - baseball - he could not get enough. He loved the sport, in fact, he was a talented pitcher and is said to have dreamed in his youth of playing for the San Francisco Giants.
If Chavez's life had taken a completely different path, he would not have been alone. Last year, 58 Venezuelans were members of US Major League Baseball teams, second only to the Dominican Republic.
US baseball teams have long seen the two countries as a cheap source of labor and talent. But critics complained that the system was exploitative with young players not treated as well as their US counterparts.
And it was this system that Hugo Chavez challenged when he became president. He forced US teams to follow Venezuelan labor regulations. As a result, many simply moved their operations to countries without such protections.
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