By the time Barack
Obama's presidency ended in January 2017, 78 of his political appointees
had "burrowed" into government jobs over the course of six years, a
report says.
The report from the Government Accountability Office was obtained by the
Washington Times.
"Burrowing" refers to a process in which political appointees are
appointed to career-level jobs to protect them from being ousted once a
new administration takes over.
Of the 78 such appointees identified in the GAO report, seven had
switched to career jobs without first receiving necessary approval from
the Office of Personnel Management, the report says. Four were later
denied the positions and three later resigned.
The department with the highest number of conversions was the Department
of Homeland Security, with nine appointees burrowing in. The Department
of Justice was second with eight conversions.
The process of burrowing is not an uncommon for administrations on the
way out. President George W. Bush had at least 26 conversions approved
in his final year in office.
Obama was warned in his final year against assigning political
appointees to career jobs and was asked by Republicans to implement a
hiring freeze to avoid keeping workers who opposed President Donald
Trump's policies.
“Not only is ‘burrowing in’ unfair to applicants without an inside
connection, it further contributes to the possibility that federal
workers may attempt to undermine the policies of the new president,”
Sens. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., and Ron Johnson, R-Wis., wrote to Obama,
McClatchyDC reported. |
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