Pentagon suspends all advisory boards in wake of last-minute Trump loyalist appointments
In response to the last-minute appointments to Defense Department boards of loyalists to former President Donald Trump, like Corey Lewandowski and others, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has ordered the suspension of the activity of the Pentagon’s 42 civilian advisory boards while a “zero-based review” -- or top-to-bottom review -- of each board is carried out, according to a senior defense official.
While the review will streamline the potential overlap of many boards, the official acknowledged that the review was driven by Austin’s concerns about the last-minute appointments.
“The secretary was deeply concerned with the pace and the extent of recent changes to memberships of the department advisory committees done with a bit of frenetic activity in the final two months of the previous administration,” said the official. “It gave him pause to consider the broad scope and purpose of these boards and and to think about how they can best be aligned and organized and composed to provide competent technical professional, policy advice to the department.”
The official said that each board will have until February 16 to suspend its activities and then the board’s “sponsor” will have until April 30 to review who should be a member of the board, and whether it is viable by aligning with the National Defense Strategy. By June 1, the Pentagon will make its decisions.
The move will affect hundreds of individuals appointed to serve on the boards but not those appointed by a president or Congress. That means former White House press secretary Sean Spicer, for example, who was appointed by Trump in 2019 to serve at the Naval Academy’s board of visitors, will not be affected. Once the review is finished, individuals will be renominated to positions by the secretary of defense or the board’s sponsors.
Addressing the notion that the move will be seen as a Trump purge, the official said that Austin believes the process of suspension and review is “the most equitable, fair, and uniformly consistent way to do it across the department.”
-ABC News' Luis Martinez