Many lawyers, scholars, and members of the public presume that Senate-confirmed presidential appointees run federal agencies. According to the latest “Plum Book,” a quadrennial listing of important positions in the federal government, over 1,200 jobs in the federal bureaucracy currently require presidential nomination and subsequent confirmation by the Senate. There are, however, a vast number of vacancies in these positions—particularly under this Administration but also in previous ones. According to a political appointee tracker, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS), for example, currently has only 35 percent of tracked positions filled and no pending nominations for any of the vacant jobs. Take a look at the current leaders...
The Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS)—a federal agency focused on finding ways t...
Each year, the federal government conducts a vast number of adjudications. These adjudications span ...
This Article argues that the long-term struggle between the President and the Senate over executive...
Many lawyers, scholars, and members of the public presume that Senate-confirmed presidential appoint...
Recent presidential reliance on acting agency officials, including an acting Attorney General, actin...
All presidential administrations experience vacancies in agency leadership. Separation of powers mod...
As Professor Anne O’Connell has effectively documented, the delay in Senate confirmations has resul...
After the 1952 presidential election, political control of the White House changed hands for the fir...
How much control should Presidents have over important decision-makers in the executive branch? The ...
Successive presidents have interpreted the FederalVacancies Reform Act of 1998 to authorize the appo...
The average delay between an executive nomination and confirmation by the US Senate is 120 days, but...
Much of the news surrounding the Trump Administration’s first year in office has focused on Presiden...
The President’s November 2018 designation of Matthew Whitaker to be the Acting Attorney General was ...
Independent agencies are in the judicial crosshairs. Scholars criticize their efficacy—while still p...
The President and the Senate bargain over the appointment of the Head of a key government department...
The Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS)—a federal agency focused on finding ways t...
Each year, the federal government conducts a vast number of adjudications. These adjudications span ...
This Article argues that the long-term struggle between the President and the Senate over executive...
Many lawyers, scholars, and members of the public presume that Senate-confirmed presidential appoint...
Recent presidential reliance on acting agency officials, including an acting Attorney General, actin...
All presidential administrations experience vacancies in agency leadership. Separation of powers mod...
As Professor Anne O’Connell has effectively documented, the delay in Senate confirmations has resul...
After the 1952 presidential election, political control of the White House changed hands for the fir...
How much control should Presidents have over important decision-makers in the executive branch? The ...
Successive presidents have interpreted the FederalVacancies Reform Act of 1998 to authorize the appo...
The average delay between an executive nomination and confirmation by the US Senate is 120 days, but...
Much of the news surrounding the Trump Administration’s first year in office has focused on Presiden...
The President’s November 2018 designation of Matthew Whitaker to be the Acting Attorney General was ...
Independent agencies are in the judicial crosshairs. Scholars criticize their efficacy—while still p...
The President and the Senate bargain over the appointment of the Head of a key government department...
The Administrative Conference of the United States (ACUS)—a federal agency focused on finding ways t...
Each year, the federal government conducts a vast number of adjudications. These adjudications span ...
This Article argues that the long-term struggle between the President and the Senate over executive...