U.S. Postal Service finalizes plan to slow some mail deliveries
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DeJoy maintains financial ties to former company as USPS awards it new $120 million contract
Louis DeJoy must resign. Now
The postmaster general has proved himself unfit to serve as the Postal Service chief and has undermined American democracy in the process.
When It Comes to the Truth of Opinion Columns, It’s Reader Beware
Thiessen went on to say that Democrats are falsely claiming that the new Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, who has given $2 million to Trump and the GOP since 2016, was appointed by Trump. In truth, Thiessen says, “He was appointed not by Trump but by the unanimous vote of the bipartisan Postal Service board of governors.”
That might sound fair enough to a casual reader. But a quick check of the USPS website, which a Washington Post factchecker could have easily made in minutes, shows that the six sitting members of that board of governors were all picked by Trump. They did indeed all vote unanimously, as Thiessen reported in his column, to confirm Trump’s nominee for the postmaster general position, but they could hardly be called a bipartisan body.
Actually, Trump curiously allowed the USPS to have no members on its board of governors for much of his first year as president, and by this point, with only five more months left in a four-year term, he has only filled six of the nine available seats. That’s significant, since under the USPS’s rules of operation, it takes the vote of seven governors to remove a postmaster general.
Postal workers in Washington State have reinstalled high-speed mail sorting machines—dismantled after controversial orders from the U.S. Postal Service— despite USPS orders not to put machines back in use.
Washington Postal Workers Defy USPS Orders And Reinstall Mail Sorting Machines
Lawsuit against Trump, postal chief seeks proper funding
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Green Bay man sues over post office turmoil
Federal complaint names Postmaster General, criticizes Congress for doing too little to curb Trump