Updated at noon Wednesday with additional information and reaction.

WASHINGTON — A Senate committee approved Kathleen Hartnett White, a climate change skeptic and former chairwoman of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, for a top environmental post Wednesday.

Voting along party lines, the Senate’s Environment and Public Works committee approved White to head the Council on Environmental Quality. Her nomination must be approved by the full Senate before she is confirmed.

White was appointed to a six-year term at the TCEQ by Gov. Rick Perry in 2001 and was previously considered to head the federal Environmental Protection Agency.

She now works as a fellow for the Texas Public Policy Foundation, a conservative think tank based in Austin. In papers for the foundation, White has questioned human-fueled climate change, claimed that carbon dioxide isn't a pollutant, and called the federal Endangered Species Act "antiquated."

Democrats on the Senate committee denounced her nomination by President Donald Trump before votes were cast.

The Council on Environmental Quality's responsibility and influence is considerable and consequential. That's why I'm deeply disappointed in the nomination of Kathleen Hartnett White. I cannot urge my colleagues more strongly to oppose her nomination. — Senator Tom Carper (@SenatorCarper) November 29, 2017

Rhode Island Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse pointed to her previous writings and statements on carbon pollution and climate change as grounds to reject her nomination.

“A nominee who can’t follow the thread from carbon pollution to ocean warming to sea level rise — who imagines science that is not there and ignores science that is there — is a preposterous nominee,” Whitehouse told the committee.

And Oregon Sen. Jeff Merkley wasn’t impressed with White’s responses to his written questions, despite her promise to ensure that regulatory actions were made “based on the most up-to-date” scientific data.

“She made this promise directly after casting doubt on the overwhelming scientific consensus that human greenhouse gas emissions are driving climate disruption,” Merkley said, adding that it seems “unreal” that the committee is considering her for the position.

White's comments have also concerned environmental advocates, who sounded the alarm over her nomination to head the federal office that coordinates among agencies. Before her confirmation hearing Nov. 8, nearly 50 groups signed a letter urging the committee to reject her nomination.

"Senate Republicans just rubber-stamped a Trump appointee who wouldn't think twice about letting our nation's most imperiled wildlife go extinct if it meant more money for polluters and special interests," Stephanie Kurose, endangered species policy specialist at the Center for Biological Diversity, said in a statement Wednesday. "White's extreme views and disturbing record should disqualify her from leading an agency whose conservation mission she fundamentally rejects."

Andrew Wheeler, a coal and nuclear lobbyist, also was approved by the committee to be deputy administrator for the EPA.

Republicans praised White's and Wheeler’s nominations and pushed back against Democrats who spoke out against them Wednesday.

“We’ve done a lot of name-calling here, and I’m sure that makes everybody on the left feel better,” Oklahoma Sen. James Inhofe said, adding that Wheeler previously served as his general counsel. “Once you get through the name-calling, we’ve done so many great things.”

.@TPPF's @KevinRobertsTX: Kathleen White "is one of the most thoughtful and judicious people I have ever known. She listens to all sides and shows superb judgment."

Read why White is right for the @WhiteHouse's Council on Environmental Quality in @thehill https://t.co/EScC0FZBG7 — Texas Public Policy Foundation (@TPPF) November 28, 2017

In an op-ed for The Hill, Texas Public Policy Foundation executive vice president Kevin Roberts called White "eminently qualified" for the position.

"White's critics may not like her political positions, but they cannot say she's less qualified than others who have held that job," Roberts wrote. "Indeed, she is every bit as qualified — and accomplished — as anyone who has served in that position under any recent president."