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How Political Burrowing Can Impact an Incoming Presidential Administration
With 43 days remaining in the presidency of Donald Trump a review by the News4 I-Team finds more of the president’s top political appointees have found a way to stick around in the Biden Administration. Scott MacFarlane reports.
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At Least a Dozen Trump Political Appointees Approved for Civil Servant Positions
Though President Donald Trump is expected to leave office in January, not all of his political appointees will follow. That’s due to a longtime, controversial practice called “burrowing” in which political appointees — whose jobs could easily be nixed by an incoming president — transition to more secure civil service positions, many times within the agencies they once helped lead….
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At Least a Dozen Trump Political Appointees Approved for Civil Servant Positions
When President Donald Trump leaves office Jan. 20, not all of his political appointees will leave, too. The News4 I-Team has learned a series of high-ranking appointees will be sticking around. Scott MacFarlane reports the way they’re doing it is legal, controversial and has been used by both parties for generations.