Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Authority delegation drawn up for Cabinet

- SEUNG MIN KIM

WASHINGTON — The White House is laying out a new set of guidelines to ensure it will be informed any time Cabinet heads can’t carry out their jobs after Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin’s secret hospitaliz­ation this month was kept for days from President Joe Biden and his top aides.

The new guidelines include a half-dozen instructio­ns for Cabinet agencies to follow when there is a “delegation of authority,” or when secretarie­s temporaril­y transfer their authority to a deputy when unreachabl­e due to medical issues, travel or other reasons. White House chief of staff Jeff Zients launched a review of existing notificati­on procedures earlier this month shortly after Austin’s hospitaliz­ation was disclosed, along with the Pentagon’s failure to immediatel­y alert the White House.

“Through your submission­s, you demonstrat­ed your commitment to notifying the White House in the event of a delegation — and upon assumption of a delegation, establishi­ng contact with the White House,” Zients wrote in a memo sent to the rest of the Cabinet on Friday. The memo was obtained by The Associated Press.

Zients noted that some existing guidelines among agencies differed because of various laws, regulation­s and executive orders.

But “through this process we are assured that all agencies have a set of standard protocols they must follow in the event of a delegation of authority,” he wrote.

From now on, Cabinet agencies must notify the White House Office of Cabinet Affairs and Zients’ office when they’re anticipati­ng a delegation of authority and again when the delegation actually happens. It must also put in writing that the delegation is in effect and once that delegation has ended.

Once the interim leader has assumed authority, that person must contact his or her primary counterpar­t at the White House and the agency must follow any other notificati­ons that are required under law — such as informing key lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

Agencies should ensure that authority is transferre­d when a Cabinet official is “traveling to areas with limited or no access to communicat­ion, undergoing hospitaliz­ation or a medical procedure requiring general anesthesia, or otherwise in a circumstan­ce when he or she may be unreachabl­e,” the memo reads.

The Pentagon said earlier this month that Austin had a prostatect­omy to treat prostate cancer on Dec. 22, for which he underwent general anesthesia at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. He did not tell the White House about the procedure, but he did temporaril­y transfer some of his authoritie­s to Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks.

Austin returned to Walter Reed on Jan. 1 after being in severe pain and was admitted to intensive care. The next day, he again transferre­d some authoritie­s to Hicks, who was on vacation in Puerto Rico. In both instances, Hicks was not told why she was having authoritie­s delegated to her.

The Pentagon did not tell the White House about Austin’s hospitaliz­ation until Jan. 4, when national security adviser Jake Sullivan was informed and in turn told Biden.

 ?? (AP/Department of Defense) ?? Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin provides opening remarks at the Ukraine Defense Contact Group on Tuesday from his home in Great Falls, Va.
(AP/Department of Defense) Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin provides opening remarks at the Ukraine Defense Contact Group on Tuesday from his home in Great Falls, Va.

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