As DeJoy Readies New Assault on Postal Service, Pressure Grows for Biden to 'Clean House'
He's still there, doing his best to mess up the mail
By Jake Johnson, staff writer for
Photo by Matthew T Rader on Unsplash |
The Washington
Post reported over the weekend that DeJoy—a
Republican megadonor to former President Donald Trump—soon intends to
"outline a new vision for the agency, one that includes more service cuts,
higher and region-specific pricing, and lower delivery expectations."
Joe Biden doesn't have the authority to directly fire this creep - he serves at the pleasure of the USPS board. |
Appointed
unanimously by the Trump-appointee-dominated Postal Service Board of Governors
in May despite his complete lack of experience with the Postal Service,
DeJoy wasted no time imposing sweeping
operational changes at the mail agency that resulted in precipitous drops in
performance in the weeks ahead of, during, and after the November presidential
election—prompting accusations of politically motivated sabotage of the
nation's most popular government institution.
While DeJoy was forced to temporarily suspend some of his operational changes last year in the face of a nationwide uproar and numerous court injunctions, the postmaster general now appears intent on moving forward with his plan to cripple the agency—a plan that has Democratic lawmakers and postal workers clamoring for action from the Biden administration.
Because
Biden is prohibited by statute from firing DeJoy directly, congressional
Democrats are urging the president to terminate every sitting postal
governor—including those who publicly cheered on the postmaster general's
changes as they produced major package backlogs nationwide and slowed delivery of prescription medicines and mail-in ballots—and replace them with
officials willing to remove the postmaster general and protect the agency.
"My
solution starts at the top: firing the whole board who presided over Trump and
DeJoy's wrecking of USPS. Clean house," Rep. Bill Pascrell, Jr.
(D-N.J.) tweeted Sunday.
Late
last month, as Common Dreams reported, Pascrell became the first
congressional Democrat to call on Biden to remove the sitting members of the
Board of Governors, which currently consists of four Republicans and one
Democrat—all appointed by Trump. Under federal law, the president has the
authority to remove postal governors "for cause."
"The
board members' refusal to oppose the worst destruction ever inflicted on the
Postal Service was a betrayal of their duties and unquestionably constitutes
good cause for their removal," argued Pascrell.
Days
later, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio.) echoed Pascrell's demand, accusing the board
members of complicity in "unprecedented sabotage" of the mail
service.
"The
response from the leadership of the USPS to the unconscionable delays we are
experiencing with the mail is beyond unacceptable," Ryan wrote in a
January 29 letter to Biden. "We must do
right by the American people, and we must do right by our postal workers and
letter carriers."
Last
week, USA Today's editorial board joined the growing chorus demanding
that Biden remove the sitting postal governors, pointing out that "beyond
the hiring of DeJoy, the Board of Governors is led by a former Republican
National Committee chairman tapped by Trump."
The
USPS board is set to meet Tuesday for the first time since Biden's electoral
victory. As the Post reported Saturday, "DeJoy has told
mail industry officials he intends to remain in office to roll out an agency
reorganization... The plan, parts of which were outlined to a Senate panel in
August, includes geographic pricing and longer delivery windows. He's
entertained leasing out Postal Service properties and offering non-mailing
services, such as private financial services."
Short
of terminating the sitting governors, Biden could instead move to fill the
three remaining vacancies on the postal board—a step that would give Democrats
a majority and potentially the number of votes needed to oust DeJoy. Nominees
to the postal board must be confirmed by the Senate.
In
the interest of protecting USPS from DeJoy and strengthening the mail agency as
a public service, American Postal Workers Union (APWU) president Mark
Dimondstein is urging Biden to make "bold appointments" to the Board
of Governors.
"We
want a Board of Governors that understands fundamentally this is not called the
United States Postal Business," Dimondstein told the Associated
Press on Sunday. "It's not a profit-making business. It's here to
serve the people."
Democratic
lawmakers and the APWU are also demanding swift passage
of the USPS Fairness Act, legislation that would scrap the onerous mandate
requiring the Postal Service to prefund retiree benefits decades in advance.
The House passed the bill last year but
then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) refused to allow a vote on
the measure in the upper chamber.
"Congress
needs to pass the USPS Fairness Act again," Pascrell tweeted Sunday.
"We did last year and McConnell blocked it for 333 days. Let's enact it
again."