Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Postmaster general pick probed

Schumer seeks documents on appointmen­t of Trump ally

- JACOB BOGAGE

WASHINGTON — The Senate’s top Democrat late Sunday asked the U.S. Postal Service’s governing board to turn over communicat­ion with the White House about the appointmen­t of new Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, a sign that Democrats plan to press the Trump administra­tion on its plans to consolidat­e control of the nation’s mail service.

Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., wrote to Postal Service Board of Governors Chairman Robert Duncan questionin­g whether DeJoy, a seasoned businessma­n and top fundraiser for President Donald Trump who took office Monday, was “selected for reasons of politics or patronage” and how he’ll distance himself from the GOP and his vast financial portfolio.

The letter is the latest salvo in a growing political battle over the future of the Postal Service. As the Trump administra­tion has sought to leverage the agency’s deteriorat­ing finances to exert more control over its operations, congressio­nal Democrats have pushed back to keep the Postal Service independen­t. DeJoy is an unusual selection as postmaster general because of his business and political ties — he ran a former Postal Service contractor that processed mail and maintained postal infrastruc­ture — but it remains to be seen how he’ll run the agency.

Schumer requested cor

respondenc­e between members of the postal board of governors and representa­tives of the Trump administra­tion, notes from interviews with job candidates, contracts with the two search firms retained by the governors, and documentat­ion on DeJoy’s stance on key issues facing the agency.

Schumer also sought a guarantee that DeJoy would resign as finance chairman for the Republican National Convention and rid his extensive portfolio of any holding that conflicts with his new role.

“His financial interests in companies that have business ties with the Postal Service, as well as his extensive campaign fundraisin­g efforts, also raise concerns regarding whether and how legal prohibitio­ns on his ethical conflicts of interest and partisan political activity as a federal employee will be addressed,” Schumer wrote to Duncan, according to a copy of the letter obtained by The Washington Post.

FINANCIAL DIVESTITUR­ES

DeJoy spokesman Monty Hagler declined to comment on Schumer’s letter, but told

The Post that DeJoy resigned his position with the GOP convention effective Friday and “will comply with any financial divestitur­es that are required.”

DeJoy and his wife Aldona Wos, the ambassador­nominee to Canada, have between $30.1 million and $75.3 million in assets in Postal Service competitor­s or contractor­s, according to Wos’s financial disclosure paperwork filed with the Office of Government Ethics.

Postal Service mail processing contractor XPO Logistics — which acquired DeJoy’s company New Breed Logistics in 2014 — represents the vast majority of those holdings.

Their combined stake in competitor­s UPS and trucking company J.B. Hunt is roughly $265,000.

Postal Service spokeswoma­n Kim Frum wrote in an email, before Schumer’s letter was sent, that the postmaster general is required to divest from only assets that present a conflict of interest so central to the agency’s operations that the postmaster general cannot recuse himself.

The North Carolina businessma­n and major Republican fundraiser succeeds Megan Brennan, whose 34-year career spanned from letter carrier to the agency’s first female leader.

But the transition comes as the coronaviru­s pandemic has slashed revenue, and the Trump administra­tion, led by Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, is attempting to pull the independen­t agency into its sphere of influence.

WHITE HOUSE PRESSURE

Mnuchin has sought to leverage a $10 billion emergency loan to extract concession­s from the Postal Service’s governing board, including the ability to approve the hiring of Brennan’s successor, according to several people familiar with negotiatio­ns. Board of governors Vice Chairman David Williams resigned over Mnuchin’s interferen­ce, frustrated that board members had capitulate­d to Treasury’s loan conditions, according to four people familiar with Williams’s thinking.

Trump has called the Postal Service “a joke,” and said he would not support a financial lifeline unless the agency quadrupled package prices, a move that experts say would devastate its finances by pricing out major package shippers and forcing them to enlarge their own distributi­on networks.

To that end, the Postal Service last month launched a review of its package prices.

Into that fray steps DeJoy, one of the richest people in North Carolina, according to Business North Carolina magazine.

He has donated more than $2 million to the Trump campaign and Republican causes since 2016, according to the Federal Election Commission, including $210,600 to the Trump Victory political action committee on Feb. 19.

He hosted a fundraiser for the president and Republican National Committee in 2017 at his home in Greensboro, N.C., where plates started at $35,000 per couple, according to the Raleigh News & Observer.

He was in charge of fundraisin­g for the Republican National Convention in Charlotte before it was moved last week to Jacksonvil­le, Fla.

His wife is Trump’s ambassador-nominee to Canada and vice chairman of the President’s Commission on White House Fellowship­s.

Duncan also chairs the fellowship commission and is a former Republican National Convention chairman.

 ?? (The Tribune-Democrat/Thomas Slusser) ?? Stan Niton, a U.S. Postal Service letter carrier, sorts through the mail last month on his route in Richland Township, Pa. The Postal Service’s future has been the focus of a growing political battle.
(The Tribune-Democrat/Thomas Slusser) Stan Niton, a U.S. Postal Service letter carrier, sorts through the mail last month on his route in Richland Township, Pa. The Postal Service’s future has been the focus of a growing political battle.

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