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New Trump Memo Promises "Dramatically More Efficient" Government; Lifts Federal Hiring Freeze

On his first full working day in the White House, President Trump issued an executive order implementing a hiring freeze until such time that his Office of Management and Budget (OMB) director, a position now filled by Mick Mulvaney, could recommend a “long-term plan” to reduce the federal workforce.  While the initial EO allowed 90 days for such a plan to be crafted and presented, like many of Trump's other policy initiatives, that deadline proved overly aggressive and has been pushed back to the end of June, with final plans due in September...the swamp apparently doesn't drain as quickly as expected.

Now, a new memorandum is expected to be issued by Trump on Thursday morning that will lift the hiring freeze but will require federal agencies to submit plans for making themselves leaner.  Per Bloomberg, the Presidential memorandum will call for a "rethinking of the entire structure of the federal government."

President Donald Trump is issuing a presidential memorandum that will call for a rethinking of the entire structure of the federal government, a move that could eventually lead to a downsizing of the overall workforce and changes to the basic functions and responsibilities of many agencies.

 

The order, which will go into effect Thursday, also will lift a blanket federal hiring freeze that has been in place since Trump’s first day in office almost three months ago and replace it with hiring targets in line with the spending priorities the administration laid out in March, said Mick Mulvaney, director of the Office of Management and Budget.

 

The move is a part of Trump’s campaign pledge to "drain the swamp" and get rid of what the administration views as inefficiencies in the federal government, Mulvaney said. It comes as the White House also is trying to curb the size of many government agencies through a proposed budget that calls for historically deep spending cuts to everything from medical research to clean-energy programs.

 

The push to reshape the government as well as the budget cuts are almost certain to draw opposition from Congress.

Meanwhile, OMB director Mulvaney made the media rounds this morning describing the "government reorg" as "probably the biggest story nobody is talking about."

“The government reorg is probably the biggest story nobody is talking about,” Mick Mulvaney, the director of the Office of Management and Budget, said in a briefing with reporters on Tuesday. “We’re trying to do something that’s never been done.”

 

"We think at the end of the day this leads to a government that is dramatically more accountable, dramatically more efficient, and dramatically more effective, following through on the very promises the president made during the campaign and that he put into place on day one," Mulvaney said.

 

“You can’t just wave a magic wand in the Oval Office and do these things,” Mr. Mulvaney said of the process by which major changes, many of which would need congressional approval, could take place. Ideas proposed by agencies would be “hard-wired” into the federal budget for fiscal year 2019, he said.

 

 

 

As the Wall Street Journal notes, Trump's original federal hiring freeze seemingly backfired as vacancies mounted at federal prisons and the Department of Veterans Affairs, two areas that Trump championed throughout his 2016 campaign.

For example, about one out of 10 positions at the Bureau of Prisons are vacant, meaning that at some facilities medical personnel are working additional overtime and correctional officers are spread more thinly.

 

At the Department of Veterans Affairs, the backlog of veterans’ claims recently topped 100,000. Hiring of staffers to process benefits claims was frozen for six weeks before VA Secretary David Shulkin in mid-March ordered that those jobs be exempted. That backlog was over 600,000 in early 2013 before the department made a concerted effort to reduce it below 100,000 starting last year.

Of course, while the Trump administration continues to tout plans for a massive restructuring of the federal government, albeit with a delayed timeline, naysayers will undoubtedly say that lifting the federal hiring freeze without a full-fledged reorganization plan in place is just another early defeat for the Trump White House.

So what say you...temporary blip in the swamp draining process or is the Washington DC swamp simply 'too big to drain'?