PRESIDENT TRUMP’S RECORD FOR FIRING IG’S MAKES HIM #1
…This
was the IG of the Defense Department, Glenn Fine, before Trump fired him
For the firing
of the overseers of government wrongdoing, Trump is number 1
Over the
past month, President Trump has fired one inspector general, and removed an acting
inspector general that was set to oversee the US pandemic response and its more
than $2 trillion dollars in new funding.
Then Trump
publicly criticized another IG from the White House briefing room. These
sustained attacks against the federal government’s watchdogs fly in the face of
Mr. Trump’s big campaign promise to “Drain the Swamp.” All of these moves further destabilized the
government’s ability to identify much of Trump’s overall waste, fraud, abuse, and
misconduct.
The nation’s 74 IGs should be among a president’s favorite actors
in government. However, instead, Trump
has doled out significant criticism of these great individuals that are there specifically
to catch the “bad Guys.”
Inspectors
general (IG's) serve as semi-independent actors across all the cabinet
departments, agencies, and other government entities with the mission and the power
to investigate wrongdoing within those agencies. They report to Congress, not to the president.
If you are worried about waste, fraud, and abuse, IGs are here to help. If you are afraid of rogue government
officials violating the nation’s law, IGs are here to investigate. If you are worried there is a deep-state
conspiracy set out to undermine the president’s legal directives, IGs are here
to protect the rule of law.
In spite
of President Trump’s bogus commitment to cleaning up Washington,
he criticized the acting HHS IG, Christi Grimm, for issuing a report
criticizing hospital equipment preparedness for COVID-19. Trump also fired the intelligence
community IG for the proper handling of a whistleblower report that served
as the foundation for his impeachment. These critiques as well as others have
showcased the president’s comfort in trying to intimidate and politicize these
government watchdogs.
There
are now suggestions that such politicization has also happened with the
appointment of the Homeland Security IG Joseph Cuffari. Since he took over as IG in the summer of 2019,
the investigations and audits in DHS have plummeted to record lows. This is even after DHS had consistently made the GAO
“High-Risk List an annual list that identifies “government operations
with vulnerabilities to fraud, waste, abuse, and mismanagement, or in need of
transformation to address economy, efficiency, or effectiveness challenges.”
There
has always been some level of tension between these government watchdogs and an
incumbent administration. Whether it is agency heads, cabinet secretaries or
even presidents. IG reports can unearth administration scandals and presidential intimidation efforts toward some
IGs can have ripple effects throughout the IG community.
In 1981,
President Reagan shocked the government by firing every IG when he came into office. That
effort had an impact beyond the officials’ removal, as Charles Johnson and
Kathryn Newcomer write today in their book: Inspectors General: Truth
Tellers in Turbulent Times. In the book they note that, “while
Reagan’s subsequent appointments were not notably ‘political,’ and despite
strong negative reactions to the mass dismissals, his actions reminded the IGs
that they were subject to dismissal by the president and that their performance
needed to be in keeping with Reagan’s pledge to reduce waste, fraud, and abuse.”
Presidents
tend to both signal their policy interests to appointees, and they reiterate their power to remove those appointees. That
can happen with a broad brush as President Reagan did or in targeted ways as
President Trump continues to do.
To that
end, the Trump administration has had historically high turnover in offices of
inspector generals. Of the 74 offices of inspector general, 13 of them are
currently vacant; have an official serving in an acting capacity; or have a
nominee set to replace a current, confirmed IG.
While those IGs oversee some smaller agencies like the Tennessee
Valley Authority (TVA), they also include major government entities like
the CIA, the Defense Department, and the intelligence community. In fact, while nine of those government bodies
have nominees pending before the Senate, four do not. And those four include
two most central to the pandemic fight and the economic recovery: that being the HHS and
Treasury.
Vacancies
at IG offices are nothing new under President Trump, who, as expected, holds
the record for overall vacancies.
During the first 39 months of the Trump
administration, there have been 37 departures among IGs and acting IGs. This
figure is historically high relative to Mr. Trump’s predecessors. According to Johnson and Newcomer’s
book, in the entirety of their first terms (48 months), Bill Clinton saw 30
departures, George W. Bush saw 28, and Barack Obama saw 27.
These
vacancies come with consequences for: leadership, morale, and decision-making.
Significant turnover can also raise concerns over politicization. Moreover, the
Trump administration has multiplied the workload of some individual IGs.
For
example, when President Trump relieved Glenn Fine as acting Inspector
General for the Defense Department, he selected Sean O’Donnell to serve in an
acting role. Mr. O’Donnell also retained his
position as Inspector General for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) he then took on the Defense Department IG role over a department with a
budget of over $700 billion.
To be
sure, vacancies among IGs can occur for a variety of reasons: firing,
retirement, expiration of an acting role, or resignation (voluntary or
otherwise), some due to presidential behavior (direct or indirect) and some
not. The sheer amount of turnover suggests there is something unique to this
administration. Relative to other
periods of history, today’s IGs are running for the exits and the staffing in those
interim periods is rocky.
To
protect IGs, Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) and Rep. Jim Cooper (D-Tenn.) recently
proposed the “Inspector General Independence Act of 2020,” which
would set fixed, renewable terms of IGs and include a "for-cause"basis for their premature removal.
Other
officials like appointees to independent commissions or the Federal Reserve
enjoy such protections in an effort to enhance their independence from the White
House.
The
broader concern over this amount of IG leadership turnover is that offices will
not function as effectively or efficiently as possible. Coupled with a
president who has been openly hostile toward IGs and their reports, it can
create an environment in which the White House has a chilling
effective on government accountability.
Effectively,
a president who aggressively attacks IGs is definitely not one “who wants to
drain the swamp.”
Trump has shown that he is a president who
wants the swamp monsters to thrive and grow. And, in this case, this president
is opting to use anti-democratic rhetoric like saying Article II means “I
have the right to do whatever I want as president” or “when somebody’s
the president of the United States, the authority is total.”
Under those conditions, the work of IGs to be
the safeguards of government and protectors of democracy is extremely important,
and their race for the exits is even more alarming.
One of
those offices, the Special Inspector General of Pandemic Recovery, was just
created late last month via emergency legislation; however, there have already
been two individuals to serve as IG, and with Trump as president, there will
probably be more.
Copyright
G. Ater 2020


Comments
Post a Comment