Democrats need to know how a post-secretary Trump mega-president.

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By Emily Cochrane

Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, a minority leader, asked the Board of Governors of the Postal Service wednesday Wednesday to publish data on the variety procedure that led Louis DeJoy to Post Office in May, accusing the council of denying access to the data.

The firm prevented lawmakers from questioning Russell Reynolds, the company involved in DeJoy’s selection, by refusing the company to accept a non-disclosure agreement, Schumer said.

Schumer said he had requested a briefing from Kimberly Archer, the firm’s leader in global non-profit practice, so that “Congress can meet its oversight obligations to better perceive the variety of Mr. DeJoy,” who is a former ceo. a transport-logistics company that operates with the postal service.

In July, the board of directors asked lawmakers to be confidential many of the data, Schumer said.

After budget cuts in the postal service slowed mail delivery, sparking fears that millions of others planning to vote by mail in November because of the pandemic would deny them their rights, especially after President Trump’s repeated denunciation of the practice, DeJoy said this week. other adjustments would be suspended until after the election.

But California President Nancy Pelosi said on a Wednesday that her “alleged pause is absolutely insufficient and does not deal with the pain already done.”

On the other hand, nearly a hundred House Democrats asked Wednesday for DeJoy’s removal, writing to the agency’s board of governors that “it had already caused a lot of damage to the establishment and that its conflicts of interest are insurmountable.”

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