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handle is hein.crs/goveqcg0001 and id is 1 raw text is: Congressional Research Service
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July 30, 2024

Presidential Transitions: Executive Branch Political
Appointment Status

The status of incumbent political appointees during
presidential transitions has often been of interest to
Congress. In some instances, appointees of an outgoing
President have continued to serve into a new
Administration. These appointees might not share the new
President's policy preferences or readily implement the new
Administration's policy agenda. This dynamic has usually
arisen when the tenure of a confirmed political appointee
extends into a new Administration as a result of fixed-term
provisions intended to insulate the appointee from the
policy preferences of the President. In other cases,
appointees have been installed in such positions in the
waning days of a presidency through a recess appointment,
although this practice has not been used since 2000.
Who Must Go?
In recent years, the leadership of the federal bureaucracy
has numbered more than 7,000 appointees. Approximately
3,700 of these are political appointees. Most others are
career members of the Senior Executive Service (SES).
Career appointees typically remain in their positions across
Administrations, unless they are transferred to other SES
positions.
Political appointments generally fall into one of four
categories:
1. Presidential appointments with the advice
and consent of the Senate (PAS),
2. Presidential appointments not requiring
confirmation (PA positions),
3. Noncareer SES appointments, and
4. Schedule C appointments.
Unless otherwise specified in law, political appointees to
executive branch positions usually serve at the pleasure of
the President. That is, they serve for indeterminate periods
of time and can be removed by the sitting President at any
time for any reason (or no stated reason).
Most political appointees step down when the appointing
President leaves office. Sometimes, an incoming President
has asked a political appointee in the outgoing
Administration to continue to serve. This is more likely to
happen where the incoming and outgoing Presidents are of
the same party, but it has occasionally happened when the
two are of different parties. For example, Robert Gates was
appointed to be Secretary of Defense by President George
W. Bush in 2006, and, at the request of President Barack
Obama, he continued to serve in that role until 2011. Those
political appointees who continue to serve across
Administrations do not need to be reappointed.

Wo May Stay?
Congress has sometimes set a specific term of office for a
particular position, restricted the President's power of
removal for a particular position, or both. Some removal
restrictions require only that the President inform Congress
of reasons for removing an official, whereas others require
that a specified process be used or a specified threshold be
met, such as upon notice and hearing, for neglect of duty
or malfeasance in office, but for no other cause. The use of
fixed terms and removal restrictions has been more
common for positions on regulatory boards-where
Congress has tried to establish a greater independence from
the President-than for positions in departments and single-
headed agencies. Although the President may remove
inspectors general under statutorily prescribed
congressional notification procedures, recent incoming
Presidents have followed a tradition of leaving them in
office.
In a 2020 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court held that a for
cause removal restriction provision pertaining to the
director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau was
unconstitutional. In a 2021 decision, the Court held that a
similar statutory for cause removal restriction applying to
the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency was
also unconstitutional. Both of these cases involved
executive branch agencies headed by a single director. The
impact of this decision on similar provisions pertaining to
other agencies-particularly collegially headed agencies-
is not clear.
In general, an appointee to a position with a fixed term and
protection from removal may serve during more than one
presidency and is not required to step down when the
appointing President leaves office. Statutory removal
protections might prohibit a President from attempting to
remove the appointee simply for policy disagreements.
Even when an appointee to a fixed-term position is not
protected from removal, however, it could be argued that
the fixed term establishes the expectation that the
incumbent will be able to serve for a certain period.
Removal of such an appointee by an incoming President
might entail an expenditure of political capital or distract
attention from the President's post-inaugural legislative
agenda.
Recess Appointments
The Constitution empowers the President to unilaterally
make a temporary appointment to a PAS position if the
position is vacant and the Senate is in recess. Such an
appointment, termed a recess appointment, expires at the
end of the following session of the Senate. At the longest, a
recess appointment made in early January, after the

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