8chan/8kun QResearch Posts (10)
#13485862 at 2021-04-22 12:43:46 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #17082: NCSWIC is not just a catch phrase.
>>13485855
Tuesday, Apr 27, 2021
3:00 PM - SD-226 Judiciary
Subcommittee on Federal Courts, Oversight, Agency Action, and Federal Rights
Topic Hearings to examine Supreme Court fact-finding and the distortion of American democracy.
Wednesday, Apr 28, 2021
9:30 AM - SD-342 Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Topic Business meeting to consider the nominations of Kiran Arjandas Ahuja, of Massachusetts, to be Director of the Office of Personnel Management, and Anton George Hajjar, of Maryland, Amber Faye McReynolds, of Colorado, and Ronald Stroman, of the District of Columbia, each to be a Governor of the United States Postal Service.
Wednesday, Apr 28, 2021
10:00 AM - SD-106/VTC Foreign Relations
Topic Business meeting to consider the nomination of Bonnie D. Jenkins, of New York, to be Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security, and other pending nominations.
Wednesday, Apr 28, 2021
10:00 AM - SD-138 Appropriations
Subcommittee on Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies
Topic Hearings to examine health disparities in Indian Country, focusing on a review of the Indian Health Service's COVID response and future needs.
Wednesday, Apr 28, 2021
10:00 AM - SD-430 Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
Topic Hearings to examine the response to COVID-19, focusing on using lessons learned to address mental health and substance use disorders.
Wednesday, Apr 28, 2021
10:00 AM - SD-G50 Judiciary
Topic Hearings to examine pending nominations.
Wednesday, Apr 28, 2021
10:00 AM - SH-216 Commerce, Science, and Transportation
Topic Business meeting to consider S.15, to require the Federal Trade Commission to submit a report to Congress on scams targeting seniors, S.115, to direct the Secretary of Commerce to conduct a study and submit to Congress a report on the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the travel and tourism industry in the United States, S.120, to prevent and respond to the misuse of communications services that facilitates domestic violence and other crimes, S.163, to address the workforce needs of the telecommunications industry, S.198, to require the Federal Communications Commission to incorporate data on maternal health outcomes into its broadband health maps, S.316, to establish a temperature checks pilot program for air transportation, S.326, to require the Secretary of Commerce to conduct an assessment and analysis of the effects of broadband deployment and adoption on the economy of the United States, S.381, to establish the National Ocean Mapping, Exploration, and Characterization Council, S.558, to establish a national integrated flood information system within the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, S.576, to amend title 14, United States Code, to require the Coast Guard to conduct icebreaking operations in the Great Lakes to minimize commercial disruption in the winter months, S.593, to restrict the imposition by the Secretary of Homeland Security of fines, penalties, duties, or tariffs applicable only to coastwise voyages, or prohibit otherwise qualified non-United States citizens from serving as crew, on specified vessels transporting passengers between the State of Washington and the State of Alaska, to address a Canadian cruise ship ban and the extraordinary impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on Alaskan communities, S.735, to amend the Scientific and Advanced-Technology Act of 1992 to further support advanced technological manufacturing
#13485853 at 2021-04-22 12:40:53 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #17082: NCSWIC is not just a catch phrase.
Committee
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
9:30 AM - SD-G50 Armed Services
Topic Hearings to examine United States Central Command and United States Africa Command in review of the Defense Authorization Request for fiscal year 2022 and the Future Years Defense Program; to be immediately followed by a closed session in SVC-217.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
9:30 AM - SR-301 Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry
Topic Business meeting to consider S.1251, to authorize the Secretary of Agriculture to develop a program to reduce barriers to entry for farmers, ranchers, and private forest landowners in certain voluntary markets; to be immediately followed by a hearing to examine the nomination of Jewel Hairston Bronaugh, of Virginia, to be Deputy Secretary of Agriculture.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
10:00 AM - SD-226 Judiciary
Subcommittee on Criminal Justice and Counterterrorism
Topic Hearings to examine behavioral health and policing, focusing on interactions and solutions.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
10:00 AM - SD-366 Energy and Natural Resources
Topic Hearings to examine the opportunities and challenges that exist for advancing and deploying carbon and carbon-dioxide utilization technologies in the United States.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
10:00 AM - SD-430 Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
Topic Hearings to examine protecting U.S. biomedical research, focusing on efforts to prevent undue foreign influence.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
10:00 AM - WEBEX Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
Topic Hearings to examine 21st century communities, focusing on capitalizing on opportunities in the clean energy economy.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
10:00 AM - WEBEX Finance
Topic Hearings to examine U.S.-China Relations, focusing on improving U.S. competitiveness through trade.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
10:15 AM - SD-342/VTC Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Topic Hearings to examine the nominations of Kiran Arjandas Ahuja, of Massachusetts, to be Director of the Office of Personnel Management, and Anton George Hajjar, of Maryland, Amber Faye McReynolds, of Colorado, and Ronald Stroman, of the District of Columbia, each to be a Governor of the United States Postal Service.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
11:30 AM - S-211 Veterans' Affairs
Topic Business meeting to consider the nomination of Richard A. Sauber, of the District of Columbia, to be General Counsel, Department of Veterans Affairs.
Tuesday, Apr 27, 2021
9:30 AM - SD-G50 Armed Services
Topic Hearings to examine Department of Defense's management challenges and opportunities.
#13485775 at 2021-04-22 12:24:07 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #17081: As The Sun Begins To Arise Edition
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
9:30 AM - SD-G50 Armed Services
Topic Hearings to examine United States Central Command and United States Africa Command in review of the Defense Authorization Request for fiscal year 2022 and the Future Years Defense Program; to be immediately followed by a closed session in SVC-217.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
9:30 AM - SR-301 Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry
Topic Business meeting to consider S.1251, to authorize the Secretary of Agriculture to develop a program to reduce barriers to entry for farmers, ranchers, and private forest landowners in certain voluntary markets; to be immediately followed by a hearing to examine the nomination of Jewel Hairston Bronaugh, of Virginia, to be Deputy Secretary of Agriculture.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
10:00 AM - SD-226 Judiciary
Subcommittee on Criminal Justice and Counterterrorism
Topic Hearings to examine behavioral health and policing, focusing on interactions and solutions.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
10:00 AM - SD-366 Energy and Natural Resources
Topic Hearings to examine the opportunities and challenges that exist for advancing and deploying carbon and carbon-dioxide utilization technologies in the United States.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
10:00 AM - SD-430 Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions
Topic Hearings to examine protecting U.S. biomedical research, focusing on efforts to prevent undue foreign influence.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
10:00 AM - WEBEX Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
Topic Hearings to examine 21st century communities, focusing on capitalizing on opportunities in the clean energy economy.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
10:00 AM - WEBEX Finance
Topic Hearings to examine U.S.-China Relations, focusing on improving U.S. competitiveness through trade.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
10:15 AM - SD-342/VTC Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Topic Hearings to examine the nominations of Kiran Arjandas Ahuja, of Massachusetts, to be Director of the Office of Personnel Management, and Anton George Hajjar, of Maryland, Amber Faye McReynolds, of Colorado, and Ronald Stroman, of the District of Columbia, each to be a Governor of the United States Postal Service.
Thursday, Apr 22, 2021
11:30 AM - S-211 Veterans' Affairs
Topic Business meeting to consider the nomination of Richard A. Sauber, of the District of Columbia, to be General Counsel, Department of Veterans Affairs.
#11199835 at 2020-10-22 00:45:04 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #14314: Helping Hands Edition
USPS First Class Mail Not Arriving On Time In Battleground States Like Pennsylvania And Michigan
The U.S. Postal Service is still not sorting mail fast enough to process for the election, according to internal agency data.
Performance levels at the USPS are down more than 5% since July and are the lowest of any point in 2020, according to a new filing in federal court made by Attorney General Josh Shapiro.
The lag comes despite recent judges' rulings that the Post Office couldn't ban overtime and late delivery trips, Bloomberg notes.
Shapiro said: "Despite being subject to multiple injunctions, defendants have not improved their service performance." He is asking for a judge to appoint an independent monitor to make sure the USPS abides by the court's orders.
Shapiro argues that late trips and overtime by mail carriers has barely moved back toward pre-July levels, before the changes were made.
Postmaster General Louis DeJoy has been accused by Democrats of trying to interefere with the November 3 election as the nation expects a massive surge in mail-in ballots due to the pandemic. Several judges have also ruled that his changes "were intended to disrupt and challenge the legitimacy of the Nov. 3 election," according to Bloomberg.
The USPS Inspector General said in a report earlier this week that DeJoy and officials never measured the impact of roughly five dozen changes put in place to save costs at the financially failing agency.
The report read: "These initiatives were implemented quickly and were communicated primarily orally, which resulted in confusion and inconsistent application across the country."
First class mail continues to lag in some areas, however, including contested states like Pennsylvania and Michigan. In early October, only about 80% of mail was delivered on time in Philadelphia. That number fell to 71% in Detroit. Rates below 95% risk delaying mail-in ballots, according to former Deputy Postmaster General Ronald Stroman.
The USPS attests that it is abiding by the court's orders, stating: "The preliminary injunction does not speak to service performance levels, or require USPS to guarantee a certain aggregate number of late or extra trips, but rather requires USPS to maintain and convey certain specific operational policies."
"USPS asks that it be allowed to perform its duty in this important period, rather than continuing to litigate unnecessary disputes before this court," the agency concluded.
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/usps-first-class-mail-not-arriving-time-battleground-states-pennsylvania-and-michigan
#9168526 at 2020-05-14 14:15:39 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #11735: Suicide Weekend Approaches Edition
>>9167477 (You) resignations in the news
Turnover in the top ranks comes as House Democrats renew push to give cash-strapped Postal Service financial relief
Eric KatzMay 13, 2020 03:54 PM ET
More Stroman news, dig on David Williams out also
The No. 2 official at the U.S. Postal Service will resign at the end of the month, the agency has announced, leaving it without a governing quorum less than a year after finally regaining one.
The resignation of Deputy Postmaster General Ronald Stroman, which USPS announced in a financial filing on Tuesday but will take effect June 1, comes days after the agency's board of governors named Louis DeJoy as the next postmaster general. DeJoy will be the first outsider to lead the Postal Service in nearly 20 years and his selection was met with some criticism from stakeholders who raised concerns about his political connections to President Trump and the Republican party. Stroman has served in his position since 2011 and has more than 40 years of federal government experience.
Stroman's resignation also follows the recent departure of David Williams from the postal board, who stepped down over the Trump administration's heavy-handed role in the agency's business decisions. Williams was seen by many stakeholders as a valuable member of the board due to his experience as a former inspector general for USPS and several other agencies.
Williams had expressed concerns about Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin placing conditions on USPS before Treasury would release a $10 billion loan authorized by Congress to help the agency respond to the fallout from the novel coronavirus pandemic. House Democrats this week unveiled legislation that would repeal Treasury's authority to place such conditions, instead making the loan available as soon as the postal board requested it. The bill, part of a larger $3 trillion package to stimulate the economy during the ongoing pandemic, would also provide a $25 billion cash injection to the Postal Service to help it offset revenue lost during the economic downturn.
House Democrats previously pushed for such a provision, but the White House ultimately stripped the funding from a previous stimulus package during its negotiations with the Senate in favor of the loan with conditions. The Democratic proposal, to which Trump has already voiced his opposition, falls far short of the $75 billion in relief sought by postal management. The USPS board last month approved a request for a $25 billion appropriation, $25 billion in unrestricted borrowing authority and an additional $25 billion for "shovel-ready" projects to modernize the agency.
A spokesman for the Postal Service said agency officials are still reviewing the legislation.
With Stroman's departure, the Postal Service now only has five members on its 11-slot board, meaning it does not have a governing quorum. Four members are Trump appointed, Senate-confirmed governors and the fifth is outgoing Postmaster General Megan Brennan. USPS was without a quorum on its board from 2014 through July 2019. Just like it did in 2014, the board has created a "temporary emergency committee" that will carry out its tasks to make business decisions and set the long-term vision for the agency. That committee can vote to appoint a new deputy postmaster general, which would then restore the quorum.
While DeJoy, the incoming postmaster general, has extensive experience in private sector shipping and logistics, his appointment was seen by postal worker unions and large-scale mailers as an attempt by the Trump administration to install a like-minded leader at the Postal Service. Trump has long complained the agency undercharges for its services and said rate increases would solve its longstanding financial problems.
https://www.govexec.com/management/2020/05/usps-board-again-loses-its-quorum-amid-further-leadership-turmoil/165372/
#9168472 at 2020-05-14 14:11:03 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #11735: Suicide Weekend Approaches Edition
>>9167477 (You) resignations in the news
Vote-by-mail under 'existential threat' as top US Postal Service official forced out: report
By Common DreamsMay 13, 2020
Deputy Postmaster General Ronald Stroman has reportedly been forced out of his position, throwing the leadership of the U.S. Postal Service into further chaos as the agency faces a potentially catastrophic financial crisis and efforts by Trump administration officials to impose draconian changes on the nation's most popular government institution.
The American Prospect's David Dayen reported Tuesday that Stroman resigned from his post earlier this week. "Sources indicate that Stroman was forced out," Dayen tweeted.
Reports of Stroman's ouster came less than a week after the USPS Board of Governors announced its selection of Louis DeJoy-a leading donor to the Republican Party and President Donald Trump-to serve as postmaster general as the agency continues to navigate the Covid-19 crisis, which has resulted in a precipitous decline in mail volume. Current USPS chief Megan Brennan, who is retiring effective June 15, has warned Congress that the agency could face financial ruin by the end of September without a rapid infusion of emergency funds.
DeJoy will choose the next deputy postmaster general.
Days before the USPS Board of Governors publicly announced its decision to appoint DeJoy, news broke that David Williams, the vice chair of the board, resigned effective April 30. Dayen, who has been reporting on the Postal Service for years, wrote last week that Williams' resignation is "distressing" because "nobody is more knowledgeable about the inner workings of the Postal Service than David Williams."
"He was the longtime Inspector General who wrote the famous (to me, anyway) white paper in 2014 arguing for the return of postal banking," Dayen wrote. "Worst of all, my sources indicate that this was a resignation in protest."
Williams was reportedly upset at the Trump Treasury Department's efforts to use a congressionally approved $10 billion loan to force significant changes to USPS operations. According to the Washington Post, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin "could use the loan as leverage to give the administration influence over how much the agency charges for delivering packages and how it manages its finances."
"In recent days, the Postal Service's board has appeared open to some of the Trump administration's terms," the Post reported last week.
The 200,000-member American Postal Workers Union accused the Trump administration of exploiting the coronavirus crisis to privatize the agency.
Recent behind-the-scenes machinations at the Postal Service could have immense real-world consequences as the U.S. barrels toward the November elections without a nationwide, universal system in place for mail-in voting, which advocates say is necessary to safely conduct elections amid the coronavirus pandemic.
With Stroman and Williams gone, the USPS Board of Governors, which sets policy for the agency, is now almost completely controlled by Trump appointees. Stroman's departure leaves the board with five members, short of the quorum required to conduct business.
"Stroman was specifically key on elections and vote by mail-this is not a good sign," tweeted ProPublica's Jessica Huseman in response to reports of Stroman's resignation.
Stephen Wolf of Daily Kos Elections echoed Huseman's warning, calling turmoil at the Postal Service "an existential threat to voting safely by mail in November."
"Trump is intent on installing his partisan lackeys in control of the Postal Service," said Wolf, "while congressional Republicans try to force it into insolvency so they can privatize it."
https://www.rawstory.com/2020/05/vote-by-mail-under-existential-threat-as-top-us-postal-service-official-forced-out-report/
#9167506 at 2020-05-14 12:08:21 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #11734: I Love The Smell Of PANIC In The Morn'n Edition
>>9167477
>Great Find ResignationAnon
>Well Anons this is a most interesting resignation, the President didn't talk about the USPS being a joke for nothing; plus giving that fact that Pelosi was trying to "bail out", I mean "buy off" the loyalty of postal workers. Stroman was working on vote by mail!
>This is BIG
>Deputy Postmaster General Ronald Stroman, after nine years at the Postal Service and more than 40 years in public service, will resign from the agency on June 1
>During his tenure, Stroman led government affairs and international mail issues for USPS, and worked with state and local officials to oversee the expansion of vote by mail
>Stroman also spearheaded strategic outreach for elections and political mail divisions as the use of vote-by-mail has increased over the past five years
>Brennan, the first woman to serve as the postmaster general, will step down June 15. She announced her retirement late last year, and expected to leave by end of January, but stayed on indefinitely until the board could name a successor
Baker, Notable
#9167477 at 2020-05-14 12:03:08 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #11734: I Love The Smell Of PANIC In The Morn'n Edition
>>9166012 Resignations in the news 5/13/2020
Great Find ResignationAnon
Well Anons this is a most interesting resignation, the President didn't talk about the USPS being a joke for nothing; plus giving that fact that Pelosi was trying to "bail out", I mean "buy off" the loyalty of postal workers. Stroman was working on vote by mail!
So what other kinds of things did Pelosi get from the PO, a network in the USPS of drugs, money, etc? I know this is Not the end of this story. This guys needs some further digs and the remaining board members. Plus remember Postmaster General Brennan, we dug in her last year, she's mentioned also; she was supposed to be gone at the end of January, leaving June 15. This is BIG
The Postal Service, a month out from its next postmaster general taking office, will also see its second-in-command leave the agency.
Deputy Postmaster General Ronald Stroman, after nine years at the Postal Service and more than 40 years in public service, will resign from the agency on June 1
According to the USPS filing to the Postal Regulatory Commission, Stroman notified the chairman of the USPS Board of Governors of his decision last Friday.
Earlier that week, the board announced former logistics executive Louis DeJoy as its pick for postmaster general. The week before, former USPS inspector general and vice president of the board, David Williams, announced his resignation.
Following Stroman's departure, the USPS board will no longer have enough members to reach a quorum. But if that happens, it can delegate authority to a Temporary Emergency Committee, which allows the four remaining Senate-confirmed governors and the postmaster general to engage in all of the board's normal decision-making. "At least until there's a successor named, or until there are more governors confirmed by the Senate, the Postal Service's Board of Governors should be able to operate as normal," Mike Plunkett, the president and CEO of the Association for Postal Commerce, told Federal News Network.
The board will select a new deputy postmaster general based on a majority vote from the four remaining Senate-confirmed governors and the postmaster general. "It is likely that Louis DeJoy wants his own number-two in there. In fact, he may already have someone in mind," Steidler said in an email.
During his tenure, Stroman led government affairs and international mail issues for USPS, and worked with state and local officials to oversee the expansion of vote by mail
Prior to joining the Postal Service, Stroman served as the staff director for the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. In his current job, he worked with lawmakers to develop several postal reform bills that often received bipartisan support, but never made it out of Congress.
"Ron [Stroman ] has led our communications and relationship-building with the Congress and among agencies at the federal, state, and local level, as well as efforts to educate postal stakeholders as we developed a framework for postal reform legislation," Postmaster General Megan Brennan wrote in a memo to industry on Wednesday.
Working with the Trump administration and the State Department, Stroman negotiated profitable rates for small international packets and prevented the U.S. from leaving the Universal Postal Union last year.
Stroman also led the agency's work in an intergovernmental strategy on electronic data for international packages, and helped law enforcement agencies detect shipments of illegal drugs.
Stroman also spearheaded strategic outreach for elections and political mail divisions as the use of vote-by-mail has increased over the past five years
With the departure of Williams and Stroman, Plunkett said the USPS Board of Governors has lost much of its institutional knowledge.
The board in June will consist of four members who have been on the job for less than two years. Meanwhile, DeJoy will be the first postmaster general in more than 20 years to lead the agency without prior experience working there. "You don't have a lot of collective experience in postal affairs at the very top of the Postal Service," Plunkett said. "Now, how important that is probably depends on your perspective on specific issues, but it's certainly an unusual state of affairs."
Brennan, the first woman to serve as the postmaster general, will step down June 15. She announced her retirement late last year, and expected to leave by end of January, but stayed on indefinitely until the board could name a successor
https://federalnewsnetwork.com/agency-oversight/2020/05/usps-board-set-to-lose-quorum-as-deputy-postmaster-general-resigns/
#9167312 at 2020-05-14 11:29:14 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #11733: The 'Durham Is Reviewing The List' Edition
>>9166012 Resignations in the news 5/13/2020
Great Find ResignationAnon
Well Anons this is a most interesting resignation, the President didn't talk about the USPS being a joke for nothing; plus giving that fact that Pelosi was trying to "bail out", I mean "buy off" the loyalty of postal workers. Stroganoff was working on vote by mail! So what other kinds of things did Pelosi get from the PO, a network in the USPS of drugs, money, etc? I know this is Not the end of this story. This guys needs some further digs and the remaining board members. Plus remember Postmaster General Brennan, we dug in her last year, she's mentioned also; she was supposed to be gone at the end of January, leaving June 15. This is BIG
The Postal Service, a month out from its next postmaster general taking office, will also see its second-in-command leave the agency.
Deputy Postmaster General Ronald Stroman, after nine years at the Postal Service and more than 40 years in public service, will resign from the agency on June 1
According to the USPS filing to the Postal Regulatory Commission, Stroman notified the chairman of the USPS Board of Governors of his decision last Friday.
Earlier that week, the board announced former logistics executive Louis DeJoy as its pick for postmaster general. The week before, former USPS inspector general and vice president of the board, David Williams, announced his resignation.
Following Stroman's departure, the USPS board will no longer have enough members to reach a quorum. But if that happens, it can delegate authority to a Temporary Emergency Committee, which allows the four remaining Senate-confirmed governors and the postmaster general to engage in all of the board's normal decision-making.
"At least until there's a successor named, or until there are more governors confirmed by the Senate, the Postal Service's Board of Governors should be able to operate as normal," Mike Plunkett, the president and CEO of the Association for Postal Commerce, told Federal News Network.
The board will select a new deputy postmaster general based on a majority vote from the four remaining Senate-confirmed governors and the postmaster general
"It is likely that Louis DeJoy wants his own number-two in there. In fact, he may already have someone in mind," Steidler said in an email.
During his tenure, Stroman led government affairs and international mail issues for USPS, and worked with state and local officials to oversee the expansion of vote by mail
Prior to joining the Postal Service, Stroman served as the staff director for the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. In his current job, he worked with lawmakers to develop several postal reform bills that often received bipartisan support, but never made it out of Congress.
"Ron [Stroman ] has led our communications and relationship-building with the Congress and among agencies at the federal, state, and local level, as well as efforts to educate postal stakeholders as we developed a framework for postal reform legislation," Postmaster General Megan Brennan wrote in a memo to industry on Wednesday.
Working with the Trump administration and the State Department, Stroman negotiated profitable rates for small international packets and prevented the U.S. from leaving the Universal Postal Union last year.
Stroman also led the agency's work in an intergovernmental strategy on electronic data for international packages, and helped law enforcement agencies detect shipments of illegal drugs.
Stroman also spearheaded strategic outreach for elections and political mail divisions as the use of vote-by-mail has increased over the past five years
With the departure of Williams and Stroman, Plunkett said the USPS Board of Governors has lost much of its institutional knowledge.
The board in June will consist of four members who have been on the job for less than two years. Meanwhile, DeJoy will be the first postmaster general in more than 20 years to lead the agency without prior experience working there.
"You don't have a lot of collective experience in postal affairs at the very top of the Postal Service," Plunkett said. "Now, how important that is probably depends on your perspective on specific issues, but it's certainly an unusual state of affairs."
Brennan, the first woman to serve as the postmaster general, will step down June 15. She announced her retirement late last year, and expected to leave by end of January, but stayed on indefinitely until the board could name a successor
https://federalnewsnetwork.com/agency-oversight/2020/05/usps-board-set-to-lose-quorum-as-deputy-postmaster-general-resigns/
#8320246 at 2020-03-05 01:30:47 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #10652 Chucky Takes on SCOTUS ~ Biden Takes on POTUS Edition
P postmaster ? How Much Power does the postmaster have ? She looks like a deep stater Obamanoid. I heard the postmaster hs a shit ton of power. Change my mind
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megan_Brennan
Megan Brennan
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Megan Brennan
Megan Brennan USPMG at 225th Anniversary of U.S. Coast Guard stamp event.jpg
74th United States Postmaster General
Incumbent
Assumed office
February 1, 2015
President Barack Obama
Donald Trump
Deputy Ronald Stroman
Preceded by Patrick Donahoe
Personal details
Born 1961 (age 58-59)[citation needed]
Pottsville, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Political party Democratic
Education Immaculata University (BA)
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MBA)
Megan Jane Brennan (born 1961[citation needed]) is the seventy-fourth Postmaster General of the United States. Brennan became the first woman to hold the office when she assumed the position on February 1, 2015