USA TODAY US Edition

NOMINEES WHO GOT NOWHERE

Dozens of people Trump chose to lead have quit or gotten cut

- Michael Collins

Here are some of Trump’s high-profile nominees or picks who never made it to confirmati­on:

Andrew Puzder

❚ Position: Labor secretary

❚ Formally nominated: Jan. 20, 2017

❚ Withdrew: Feb. 15, 2017

Vincent Viola

❚ Position: Army secretary

❚ Formally nominated: Jan. 20, 2017

❚ Withdrew: Feb. 3, 2017

Mark Green

❚ Position: Army secretary

❚ Nomination announced: April 7, 2017

❚ Withdrew: May 5, 2017

Tom Marino

❚ Position: Director, Office of National Drug Control Policy

❚ Formally nominated: Sept. 5, 2017

❚ Withdrew: Oct. 17, 2017

Matthew Petersen

❚ Position: U.S. district court judge, District of Columbia

❚ Formally nominated: Sept. 11, 2017

❚ Withdrew: Dec. 18, 2017

K.T. McFarland

❚ Position: U.S. ambassador to Singapore

❚ Nomination announced: Jan. 8, 2018

❚ Withdrew: Feb. 5, 2018

Ronny Jackson

❚ Position: Veterans Affairs secretary

❚ Formally nominated: April 16, 2018

❚ Withdrew: April 26, 2018

Ronald Vitiello

❚ Position: Director, Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t

❚ Formally nominated: Aug. 16, 2018

❚ Withdrew: April 4, 2019

Heather Nauert

❚ Position: U.N. ambassador

❚ Nomination announced: Dec. 7, 2018

❚ Withdrew: Feb. 16, 2019

Stephen Moore

❚ Position: Federal Reserve Board of Governors

❚ Nomination announced: March 22, 2019

❚ Withdrew: May 2, 2019

Herman Cain

❚ Position: Federal Reserve Board of Governors

❚ Nomination announced: April 4, 2019

❚ Withdrew: April 22, 2019

Pat Shanahan

❚ Position: Defense secretary

❚ Nomination announced: May 9, 2019

❚ Withdrew: June 18, 2019

WASHINGTON – On his first day in office, President Donald Trump formally nominated Andrew Puzder as his labor secretary, handing a key position in his administra­tion to a fast-food magnate who he’d boasted would save businesses from “the crushing burdens of unnecessar­y regulation­s.”

But Puzder couldn’t even save himself.

Puzder, who ridiculed his own restaurant employees as “the best of the worst” and said he’d like to replace them with robots, withdrew his nomination less than a month later amid revelation­s he had employed an undocument­ed housekeepe­r and failed to promptly pay taxes on her.

Puzder was one of the first, but not the last, of Trump’s nomi

nees to fall. The pattern has been repeated again and again as more than five dozen of Trump’s picks for various jobs either withdrew or saw their nomination­s pulled before they were put through the confirmati­on process in the Senate.

“We’re way over two years into this administra­tion, and there are very large blocks of the government where you simply don’t have confirmed leadership,” said Max Stier, president and chief executive officer of the Partnershi­p for Public Service, a nonpartisa­n group that has tracked the nomination­s process.

Sixty-one of Trump’s nominees have taken themselves out of considerat­ion or saw their nomination­s pulled – nearly twice the casualty rate under President Barack Obama, who had withdrawn 32 nomination­s at the same point in his presidency, according to data collected by Stier’s group.

In Trump’s case, the number is actually higher. The Partnershi­p for Public Service data includes only job candidates who were formally nominated. It doesn’t count nominees for federal judgeships or candidates whom Trump said he intended to nominate but who took themselves out of the running before their official paperwork was sent to the Senate.

The latest Trump pick to withdraw is acting Defense Secretary Pat Shanahan, who took himself out of considerat­ion for defense secretary Tuesday after coming under scrutiny over a violent fight with his then-wife nine years ago. Shanahan had not formally been nominated for the position.

The chosen-but-not-formally-nominated dropouts include Herman Cain and Stephen Moore, whom Trump announced last spring that he would appoint to the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors. Both quit before Trump made their nomination­s official.

Critics, including some Republican­s in Congress, have suggested Trump’s high withdrawal rate is caused by the administra­tion’s failure to properly vet the background­s of potential nominees. Trump has complained that the vetting process is “too ugly and too disgusting” and, at times, has chosen to follow his instincts instead of the counsel of his advisers.

“The president who promised to ‘drain the swamp’ has chosen so many conflict-of-interest-ridden lackeys to run our nation’s government, precipitat­ing a parade of ethics scandals, resignatio­ns and withdrawal­s,” said Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. “This approach is failing the American people,” he said.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

Sixty-one of Trump’s nominees have taken themselves out of considerat­ion or saw their nomination­s pulled – nearly twice the casualty rate under Barack Obama, who had withdrawn 32 nomination­s at the same point in his presidency.

Partnershi­p for Public Service

Andrew Puzder

❚ Position: Labor secretary

❚ Formally nominated: Jan. 20, 2017

❚ Withdrew: Feb. 15, 2017 Puzder, who was chief executive officer of CKE Restaurant­s, the parent company of the Hardee’s and Carl’s Jr. fast-food chains, faced a torrent of criticism over workplace conditions at his restaurant­s, his opposition to raising the minimum wage and expanding overtime eligibilit­y for workers, and his derogatory comments about some of his employees. The final blow to his nomination was his admission that he had employed an undocument­ed housekeepe­r and failed to promptly pay taxes on her. Puzder withdrew before he received a confirmati­on hearing in the Senate.

Vincent Viola

❚ Position: Army secretary

❚ Formally nominated: Jan. 20, 2017

❚ Withdrew: Feb. 3, 2017

Viola, the billionair­e owner of the Florida Panthers and a West Point graduate, received plaudits from Trump for “distinguis­hed military service” and a “highly impressive” track record in business. Viola quickly pulled his nomination after citing difficulti­es in divesting himself from his businesses.

Mark Green

❚ Position: Army secretary

❚ Nomination announced:

April 7, 2017

❚ Withdrew: May 5, 2017

Green, a physician and Iraq War veteran, was Trump’s second pick for Army secretary after Viola withdrew his nomination for the post. Green quickly came under fire from advocacy organizati­ons for gays and lesbians that denounced him as “a social issues warrior” and from other minority groups over comments that some considered derogatory toward the Islamic faith and its followers. Green called the attacks “false and misleading” but neverthele­ss took himself out of considerat­ion before he was formally nominated for the job. A Republican aligned with the tea party, he was elected to Congress last November as a representa­tive from Tennessee.

Tom Marino

❚ Position: Director, Office of National Drug Control Policy

❚ Formally nominated: Sept. 5, 2017

❚ Withdrew: Oct. 17, 2017 Marino, a Republican congressma­n from Pennsylvan­ia, withdrew from considerat­ion for the drug czar’s job less than two days after reports he backed legislatio­n that restricted the enforcemen­t of opioid laws. The Washington Post and “60 Minutes” reported that Marino was the key lawmaker behind legislatio­n that made it virtually impossible for the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion to freeze suspicious narcotics shipments from drug companies.

Matthew Petersen

❚ Position: U.S. district court judge, District of Columbia

❚ Formally nominated: Sept. 11, 2017

❚ Withdrew: Dec. 18, 2017 Petersen, a graduate of the University of Virginia Law School, served on the Federal Election Commission with White House counsel Don McGahn but had no trial experience when Trump chose him for a lifetime federal judgeship in the District of Columbia. At his confirmati­on hearing, Petersen was unable to answer basic questions about legal procedure while being grilled by Sen. John Kennedy, R-La. Days after a video of the exchange went viral on social media, Petersen withdrew, saying his nomination had become a distractio­n for the administra­tion.

K.T. McFarland

❚ Position: U.S. ambassador to Singapore

❚ Nomination announced: Jan. 8, 2018

❚ Withdrew: Feb. 5, 2018 McFarland, who served as Trump’s deputy national security adviser, was tapped twice for the Singapore ambassador­ship. Trump first picked her for the job in May 2017, but the nomination stalled in Congress as she came under scrutiny by investigat­ors looking into contacts between Trump’s presidenti­al campaign and Russian operatives. Trump announced the following January that he would resubmit McFarland’s nomination, but she withdrew from considerat­ion less than a month later.

Steven Gardner

❚ Position: Director, Office of Surface Mining Reclamatio­n and Enforcemen­t

❚ Formally nominated: Jan. 8, 2018

❚ Withdrew: Sept. 6, 2018 Gardner, a Kentucky mining consultant who questioned whether humans play a role in climate change, won praise from coal groups but criticism from environmen­talists when he was chosen to lead the Interior Department’s mining agency. Gardner pulled his nomination before he ever got a confirmati­on hearing. He blamed his departure on his inability to reach a consensus on the terms of an ethics agreement despite a year of negotiatio­ns with the Office of Government Ethics.

Ronny Jackson

❚ Position: Veterans Affairs secretary

❚ Formally nominated: April 16, 2018

❚ Withdrew: April 26, 2018 Jackson, a Navy rear admiral, served as physician to the president and received glowing reviews from Obama and Trump before Trump picked him to become secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs. Trump disclosed in February that Jackson was his choice for the job and formally nominated him a few weeks later. By then, Jackson had come under withering criticism for a lack of management experience and for accusation­s by colleagues that he improperly dished out opioids, drank on the job and fostered a hostile work environmen­t at the White House medical office. He withdrew his nomination after a few weeks.

Ronald Vitiello

❚ Position: Director, Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t

❚ Formally nominated: Aug. 16, 2018

❚ Withdrew: April 4, 2019 Vitiello served as acting director of the agency responsibl­e for enforcing immigratio­n laws within the nation when Trump nominated him to become the permanent director. Trump withdrew the nomination in April as the agency dealt with a surge in illegal crossings at the U.S.-Mexican border. Trump said he wanted ICE to go “in a tougher direction.” Vitiello resigned from the agency six days later.

Heather Nauert

❚ Position: U.N. ambassador

❚ Nomination announced:

Dec. 7, 2018

❚ Withdrew: Feb. 16, 2019 Nauert, a former Fox News host who served as the State Department’s spokespers­on, withdrew her name from considerat­ion amid concerns about her qualificat­ions for the highprofil­e ambassador­ship. Though Trump announced she was his choice for the job, she was never formally nominated.

Stephen Moore

❚ Position: Federal Reserve Board of Governors

❚ Nomination announced:

March 22, 2019

❚ Withdrew: May 2, 2019 Moore, an economics writer and critic of the Fed, was chosen for a seat on the seven-member board as part of Trump’s plan to change the central bank’s direction. Critics questioned his qualificat­ions for the position, and his controvers­ial writings on women and other topics touched off an uproar. (Moore wrote that he wasn’t a big believer in democracy and called the use of female referees at sporting events “an obscenity.”) Citing “unrelentin­g attacks on my character,” Moore pulled his name from considerat­ion before he was formally nominated.

Herman Cain

❚ Position: Federal Reserve Board of Governors

❚ Nomination announced:

April 4, 2019

❚ Withdrew: April 22, 2019

Cain, the former chief executive of Godfather’s Pizza, pushed the “9-9-9” tax plan to replace the tax code with an overall 9% tax during his 2012 bid for the GOP presidenti­al nomination. Like Moore, Trump chose him for a seat on the seven-member Federal Reserve board as part of his plan to change the central bank’s direction. Cain’s possible nomination was met with a backlash among Democrats and some Republican­s in Congress who cited sexual misconduct allegation­s against him that surfaced during his failed presidenti­al campaign. As his chances of confirmati­on were virtually doomed, Cain pulled his name from considerat­ion before he was formally nominated.

Pat Shanahan

Position: Defense secretary

❚ Nomination announced: May 9, 2019

❚ Withdrew: June 18, 2019 Shanahan, a former Boeing executive, helped lead the company’s commercial aircraft program before joining the Defense Department as deputy defense secretary in 2017. He took over as acting defense secretary Jan. 1, 2019, after Jim Mattis resigned over difference­s with Trump. His ascendance to the chief position at the department ended when Trump announced June 18 that Shanahan decided to withdraw from the confirmati­on process. The president said he would replace Shanahan with Mark Esper, the secretary of the Army. Trump’s announceme­nt came about an hour after USA TODAY published a story that detailed an FBI examinatio­n of a violent domestic dispute in 2010 between Shanahan and his then-wife.

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 ??  ?? Andrew Puzder, right, withdrew as President Donald Trump’s labor nominee after it came to light that Puzder failed to pay taxes on an undocument­ed housekeepe­r.
Andrew Puzder, right, withdrew as President Donald Trump’s labor nominee after it came to light that Puzder failed to pay taxes on an undocument­ed housekeepe­r.
 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP ?? White House physician Ronny Jackson was criticized for fostering a hostile work environmen­t before dropping out of considerat­ion for Veterans Affairs secretary.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA/AP White House physician Ronny Jackson was criticized for fostering a hostile work environmen­t before dropping out of considerat­ion for Veterans Affairs secretary.
 ?? CAROLYN KASTER/AP ?? K.T. McFarland, right, was deputy to former national security adviser Michael Flynn, who later pleaded guilty to making false statements to the FBI.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP K.T. McFarland, right, was deputy to former national security adviser Michael Flynn, who later pleaded guilty to making false statements to the FBI.

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