Trump asks some 50 senior officials appointed by Obama to stay on
President-elect Donald Trump has asked roughly 50 senior
Obama administration appointees to remain in their posts after his inauguration
to ensure continuity in government, his incoming White House press secretary
said Thursday.
The officials include the highest-ranking career officials
at key national security agencies like the Pentagon and state department.
eputy defence secretary Robert Work and America’s third-ranking
diplomat, Under secretary of state for political affairs Thomas Shannon, will
serve as acting chiefs of their agencies until successors for the top jobs are
confirmed by the senate, Trump’s spokesperson Sean Spicer said.
Thursday’s announcement comes after weeks of questions about
how Trump’s team is managing the presidential transition, although it may not
address broader concerns about what officials at many federal agencies have
said is a lack of communication with the incoming team.
Such concerns are natural in presidential transitions. But
the confusion among officials at national security agencies could have
consequences, given their international engagements. The rest of the world
doesn’t pause while Washington determines its chains of command.
Work will likely helm the defence department for only a
matter of hours. Trump’s selection for the Pentagon, retired Gen. James Mattis,
is expected to be confirmed on Friday shortly after the inauguration ceremony,
along with retired Gen. John Kelly for secretary of homeland security.
Senate debate on Trump’s choice for CIA boss, former Rep.
Mike Pompeo, is expected to start Friday. It is unclear if Pompeo will receive
an immediate confirmation vote.
At the state department, Shannon will be in charge until at
least until next week as a Senate vote on Trump’s choice for secretary of
state, former Exxon Mobil CEO Rex Tillerson, isn’t expected until Monday or
Tuesday.
Also staying will be Brett McGurk, the Obama
administration’s point-man for fighting the Islamic State group, Nicholas
Rasmussen, the National Counterterrorism Centre director, and Adam Szubin, the
treasury department’s top official for terrorism and financial intelligence.
Spicer said Chuck Rosenberg, the drug enforcement agency
administrator, and Susan Coppedge, the state department’s ambassador-at-large
to combat human trafficking, would be left in place for the transition.A full list of Obama appointees asked to remain was not
immediately available.
It also wasn’t clear if the Trump administration would
accept an invitation to attend Russian-supported Syria peace talks in Astana,
Kazakhstan, on Monday.
Trump has made a great point about seeking closer
cooperation with Moscow on counterterrorism and security matters.
Obama’s
special envoy for Syria, Michael Ratney, has indicated he is willing to attend,
but the transition team hadn’t instructed him to make the trip. Spicer said an
announcement was expected soon.
As in previous transitions, U.S. embassies and consulates
abroad headed by noncareer, presidential appointee ambassadors will transfer to
the most senior career diplomat present until the new administration fills the
top posts.
The transition team has largely yielded on matters of
national security to retired Gen. Michael Flynn, Trump’s national security
adviser, and Jared Kushner, the president-elect’s son-in-law. But the circle
will have to be expanded once the new administration assumes the full
responsibility of government.
When President Barack Obama took office in 2009, the Senate
confirmed seven Cabinet members on Inauguration Day. Republicans and Democrats
are still negotiating over Trump’s picks, and Mattis and Kelly may be the only
ones to make it through Friday
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