Author Topic: Congress: Don’t Grant Austin a Waiver, but If You Do, Reform the Process  (Read 156 times)

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Congress: Don’t Grant Austin a Waiver, but If You Do, Reform the Process
By Soren Dayton, Christine Kwon
Tuesday, December 29, 2020, 11:51 AM

       

Four years after four-star general Lloyd J. Austin III retired from the U.S. Army, President-elect Joe Biden has tapped Austin to serve as his secretary of defense. Austin’s military career is accomplished, and his nomination, historic. But another roadblock stands in Austin’s way even before Congress can assess Austin’s merits for the cabinet position: Congress would first have to grant Austin an exemption from the statutory requirement that retired service members be out of uniform for at least seven years before running the Defense Department.

A congressional waiver would override the seven-year restriction. If confirmed, Austin would be only the third retired general to serve as secretary of defense since Congress unified the military services into a single Department of Defense soon after World War II. As it stands, Congress is poised to consider the issue of Austin’s waiver on an expedited basis. And reports suggest that Congress will grant him the exemption.

https://www.lawfareblog.com/congress-dont-grant-austin-waiver-if-you-do-reform-process