Thompson Announces Hearing on The State of the Presidential Appointment Process

Thompson Announces Hearing on The State of the Presidential Appointment Process

The following press release was published by the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs on April 3, 2001. It is reproduced in full below.

WASHINGTON- Senate Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Fred Thompson (R-TN) announced that the full committee will hold a two-part hearing on the state of the presidential appointment process. The committee will examine the process presidential appointees currently undergo, ascertain its effects on public service, and hear recommendations for reform.

Wednesday, April 4, 2001

2:00 PM

342 Dirksen Senate Office Building

Thursday, April 5, 2001

10:00 AM

342 Dirksen Senate Office Building

Wednesday, the committee will hear from witnesses with hands-on experience as presidential appointees, as well as experience running the appointment process, who will describe the problems they encountered. Experts will outline the original purposes of the laws and processes affecting presidential appointments to office and how and why they may have become skewed over time.

Thursday morning, two new recommendations for reform will be released by the Presidential Appointee Initiative and the Office of Government Ethics, as required by a committee amendment to the Presidential Transition Act of 2000.

WEDNESDAY WITNESS LIST

PANEL ONE

The Presidential Appointment Process: The Perspective of the Nominee

The Honorable Sean O?Keefe

Deputy Director, Office of Management and Budget

The Honorable Robert Nash

Former Director, White House Office of Presidential Personnel

Paul C. Light

Vice President and Director of Governmental Studies, The Brookings Institution

PANEL TWO

Presidential Appointment Process: Origin, Development, and Calls for Reform

Scott Harshbarger

President and Chief Executive Officer, Common Cause

G. Calvin MacKenzie

Distinguished Presidential Professor of American Government, Colby College

Patricia McGinnis

President and Chief Executive Officer, Council for Excellence in Government

Norman J. Ornstein

Resident Scholar, American Enterprise Institute

THURSDAY WITNESS PANEL

Recommendations to Reform the Presidential Appointment Process

The Honorable Amy Comstock

Director, Office of Government Ethics

The Honorable Nancy Kassebaum Baker

Former U.S. Senator

Co-Chair, Presidential Appointee Initiative

The Honorable Franklin Raines

Former Director, Office of Management and Budget

Chairman and CEO, Fannie Mae Foundation

Co-Chair, Presidential Appointee Initiative

Source: U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs

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