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Obama Still Has Hundreds Of Important Jobs To Fill

NANCY BENAC   04/11/09 10:04 PM ET   AP

Obama Admin Jobs

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama doesn't have time for a victory lap now that his Cabinet is finally largely in place.

One level down, he faces gaping holes in the ranks he needs to fill if there is to be any hope of turning his ambitious agenda into action on health care, the environment and much more.

After a spurt of recent activity that followed a problem-plagued start, Obama is outpacing George W. Bush and Bill Clinton on appointments. But Obama, like his two immediate predecessors, is bogged down in a system that has grown increasingly cumbersome over the years. And he's added tougher-than-ever background checks and ethics rules.

"Obama will be faster than Clinton and Bush when all is said and done, but it's still a slow process," said New York University professor Paul Light, an expert on the federal government. "A turtle is a turtle is a turtle. The Obama administration is a pretty fast turtle, but it's no hare."

What's at stake is much more than bragging rights for how quickly Obama can fill in an organizational chart with names for undersecretary of this and deputy assistant secretary of that. These are the people Obama needs to carry out all sorts of promised initiatives and policy shifts, and to assure that the nation stays safe along the way.

At a recent congressional hearing, for example, Rep. Sue Myrick, R-N.C., lamented that Dennis Blair, the national intelligence director, doesn't have time to manage the extra responsibilities he's been given on economics and climate change.

"The ideal person for that is the principal deputy director of national intelligence," suggested Edward Maguire, the agency's outgoing inspector general.

But that's one of hundreds of seats still empty. There are similar stories all across government.

NASA is awaiting a new administrator as the space agency approaches a big deadline about when to retire the space shuttle fleet. At the Health and Human Services Department, where Kathleen Sebelius will be the last member of Obama's Cabinet to win confirmation by the Senate, 19 of the top 20 slots are being filled by acting career employees and the 20th is empty. This at a time when Obama is calling for sweeping changes in the way people get health care coverage. Four planned HHS nominations have been announced.

At the Interior Department, Obama has yet to name a replacement to lead the Minerals Management Service, central in plans to expand renewable energy production off the nation's coasts.

Obama also has not picked someone to head the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., a quasi-government outfit that insures the pensions of 44 million workers and retirees _ critical when bankruptcies are mounting. The corporation is being run by an acting director from the civil service.

George Mason University professor James Pfiffner, an expert on presidential appointments, said that while capable civil servants can keep the government functioning, no one expects them to "go off in a new direction" to carry out a new president's policies.

Light describes it as a "neckless government," representing the gap between the new Cabinet secretaries and the career employees.

"You really need the president's people in there to put the push on for action," he said.

All told, Obama has about 500 appointments to make that are subject to Senate confirmation, and about 3,000 positions to fill overall, Light estimates.

By the White House's own count, Obama is outpacing his three predecessors at getting top-level appointees confirmed. But the numbers still are paltry, given all the vacancies to be filled. As of March 31, by an internal White House tally, Obama had 38 top-level officials confirmed, compared with 27 for George W. Bush, 37 for Clinton, and 27 for George H.W. Bush.

Considerably more names have been announced and are winding their way through the confirmation process.

"It's very clear that the Obama personnel operation has picked up speed," Light said. "They're now loading the pipeline quite efficiently."

That shifts the logjam down Pennsylvania Avenue to the Senate, which must confirm top-level appointees. Jim Manley, a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said most of the dozens of names awaiting confirmation didn't arrive until mid-March, and that action now "hinges on Republicans agreeing to move these nominees."

And Congress' two-week spring break will put action on hold temporarily until at least late April.

Terry Sullivan, executive director of the White House Transition Project, said Obama appears to be on track to get 100 appointments confirmed in his first 100 days, a modern benchmark recommended by some. But he said that still means "the government is mostly empty desks for the first year," which makes it hard to push an ambitious agenda.

Obama himself has bemoaned the "onerous" appointments process, taking note in particular of early trouble filling critical spots at the Treasury Department, where several potential nominees backed out after their names were announced.

"A lot of people who we think are about to serve in the administration and Treasury suddenly say, 'Well, you know what? I don't want to go through some of the scrutiny, embarrassment, in addition to taking huge cuts in pay,'" Obama told CBS' "60 Minutes" late last month.

Obama added to the hurdles by imposing tougher ethics rules and by increasing scrutiny of nominees' taxes after revelations that Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner had failed to pay $34,000 in payroll taxes and that former Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle, Obama's first pick for health secretary, owed $140,000 in back income taxes and interest.

Darrell West, director of governance studies at the Brookings Institution, a think tank, said Obama was setting "Mother Teresa standards in a city with very few saints."

West called the number of appointees in place "dangerously low given the enormity of the challenges we face. Obama is holding his people to such a high standard it is wounding his administration."

___

Associated Press writers Pam Hess, Dina Cappiello, Seth Borenstein and Deb Riechmann contributed to this report.

___

On the Net:

White House: http://www.whitehouse.gov/

White House Transition Project: http://whitehousetransitionproject.org/

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WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama doesn't have time for a victory lap now that his Cabinet is finally largely in place. One level down, he faces gaping holes in the ranks he needs to fill if ...
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama doesn't have time for a victory lap now that his Cabinet is finally largely in place. One level down, he faces gaping holes in the ranks he needs to fill if ...
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10:12 AM on 04/13/2009
He's still filled more spots than the last two Presidents at this point in time.
01:34 PM on 04/12/2009
I'd like to know how many of those 200,000 people who submitted resumes via the website actually got jobs. Any at all???
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Tom Joad
"While there is a lower class, I am in it "
08:40 PM on 04/12/2009
"Obama Still Has Hundreds Of Important Jobs To Fill"

Patience. I was one of those. Wish me luck!
06:18 AM on 04/13/2009
GOOD LUCK TOM!!!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Okieborn
Equal Rights For All !
09:45 AM on 04/12/2009
I Voted For President Obama and Am Wondering What The Heck He Is Thinking !!
Geithner and Summers Are Very Very Very Bad Choices !!!
God Bless America !!
A Democrat Wanting "CHANGE " Not The Same Old Crap Warmed Over !!!!
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RoveRoveRoveYourBoat
.....last one out, turn off the lights.
12:34 AM on 04/12/2009
...must be running out of:
University of Chicago Friedman economists,
DLC corporate corupted democrats,
federalist society jurists and
Goldman Sachs swindlers!?!?!?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rsprags
No Pets but like Animals
11:10 PM on 04/11/2009
There is no story here; so what? the position will be filled. Same in every administration; we will not be moved. I see why this profession is struggling to stay solvent. W E A K!
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Badfickle
02:10 AM on 04/12/2009
You are right it is a stupid story.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhilipTaylor
Legalized Bribery is an Oxymoron - must END
10:53 PM on 04/11/2009
He seems to like WALL STREET so much and there are a lot of people there who have lost their JOBS like the 5.1 Million on Main Street!

Since he has chosen mostly Wall Street People we can be sure he will continue that TREND!

After All Wall Street gave him more money than any other candidate in the Early Running of his campaign!

And Wall Street has given $5 Billion to Congress over the last 10 years ($7.5 Million per Senator every four years). So Wall Street will fill a lot of those positions!
10:18 PM on 04/11/2009
This is going to become a tough issue for Obama. He is quickly running out of tax cheats to employ.
10:40 PM on 04/11/2009
and ur running out of parole hearings to be denied at, once again....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cbat
10:42 PM on 04/11/2009
You got jokes, but I sure he can always add a republican, that would cover it, the biggest tax cheats in the worlddddddd. Republicans should never throw stones, just like during the election, you might get hit hard.
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puffthedragon
progressive
09:49 PM on 04/11/2009
Who wants to tea bag rush limpba?
10:40 PM on 04/11/2009
meghan, some one said it earlier today...credit due.
09:16 PM on 04/11/2009
It's all Bush's fault!
09:45 PM on 04/11/2009
and ur's...
09:59 PM on 04/11/2009
you have no one to blame but yourself... you voted for him.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MESGAIN26
08:52 PM on 04/11/2009
kind of hard to staff postions with republicans blocking every appointee
07:54 PM on 04/11/2009
I can see there's not too many people posting that own businesses. President Obama is responsible for staffing the U.S. government which is also a business. It take time to staff thousands of jobs. Some which are key positions.
08:27 AM on 04/12/2009
No one here owns businesses, most are college students who haven't ventured forth into the real world. Perhaps that is why their perspective is jaded and they still call names rather than debate.
07:48 PM on 04/11/2009
Considering the background checks and particularly the stops being put on by republican congressmen keeping nominations on hold for interminably long times, that is.. At least this president seems to care about the backgrounds and let's face it...George Bush had a republican congress that rubber stamped every thing they did and did not have to worry about any vetoing or filibuster during the 2001 and 2004 year of administration personnel decisions.following an inauguration.
10:19 PM on 04/11/2009
Yeah, Obama does background check to ensure that those he selects does not pay any taxes.
10:41 PM on 04/11/2009
go to ur room and wait there, no one is coming for u....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cbat
10:46 PM on 04/11/2009
What is with you and this tax thing, project much. Look, I am sure we would not have to look too deep to find tax cheats in old Bush criminal admin, hell, we just need look at the current republican congress. Do not be a hypocritcal fool all your life.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Oonagh
Old sins have long shadows
07:41 PM on 04/11/2009
For President Obama it must be so difficult to get people in his cabinet... honestly, who would want to take on the job at hand... it would be so much easier if he had a surplus and no wars.... I wonder if the Republicans discovered that they left a mess behind.
07:27 PM on 04/11/2009
I wonder if some people are leery of joining the treasury department because they do not want to be associated with a plan that benefits Wall Street at the expense of Main Street.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LKV
07:36 PM on 04/11/2009
Before Jan 20 2009 you bet!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MESGAIN26
08:54 PM on 04/11/2009
how u figure wallstrree t went bust under bush rember
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StillweRise
11:22 PM on 04/11/2009
facts are irrelevant in a republican's 'argument'. fyi.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
skatscan
07:20 PM on 04/11/2009
Chin, Lee, Chan, Damn that's too hard to remember.