Biden Won’t Reappoint Ron Bloom to USPS Board, Key Ally to Louis DeJoy

President Joe Biden won’t be renominating Ron Bloom, the current chair of the United States Postal Service (USPS) Board of Governors and a staunch ally to Postmaster General Louis DeJoy.

According to a report from The Washington Post, which cited three sources knowledgeable about the decision, Biden will announce later on Friday that he’s not seeking to keep Bloom on the board, and that he’s opting to nominate a new person to take his place as a board member instead.

The move could be the first step in the process of replacing DeJoy as head of the Post Office, an outcome that many have called for in response to several detrimental actions he’s taken at USPS.

Replacing Bloom won’t necessarily guarantee that DeJoy will be replaced, as the board that Bloom currently chairs is made up of four Democrats and four Republicans, along with one independent. However, many view Bloom as the biggest obstacle to DeJoy being replaced.

Bloom, nominally a Democrat in title, was nominated by President Donald Trump and approved before by the rest. he was confirmed in the Republican-controlled Senate in 2019. Bloom, despite the grievances of many with DeJoy’s, has made it clear he has no intention of voting to remove the current postmaster generalFrom his position, it is an action that can only by the USPS Board of Governors.

Bloom’s reappointment to the board may not have happened even if Biden decided to nominate him to another term. Several lawmakers in the Senate, which must approve board members’ appointments, had expressed misgivings about Bloom serving again — including Senators. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-New York), Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisconsin), Jeff Merkley (D-Oregon), and Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont), who collectively cited Bloom’s support of DeJoy as the reason they would oppose his reinstatement.

Biden has not explicitly stated DeJoy’s removal as one of his top priorities. However, members of his administration have implied it. In February, when asked directly about Biden’s position on the postmaster general, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki responded that the president “believes leadership [at USPS] can do better.”

DeJoy’s tenure has been marred by unpopular decisions and questions regarding his conflicts of interest. As a Trump mega-donor, DeJoy did not sell several companies that had USPS contracts.Infringement of federal law occurred within the first few weeks of his tenure. DeJoy still had millions of dollars in financial interests with XPO Logistics — a company he once ran — in the first few months after his May 2020 appointment, a Freedom of Information Act request from the nonprofit watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) found.

“There was a period of time where the head of the Postal Service was making decisions when there could have been a conflict, and he could have been thinking about his own financial interest, rather than the interest of the Postal Service and the country,” Noah Bookbinder, president of CREW, said.

DeJoy recently Initiated a 10-year plan that he claims will help USPS financially, but which comes at incredible costs in service to the American people — including slowing down First Class deliveries from three days to five days.

“These new service standards won’t improve the Postal Service — they will make it harder for people all across the country to receive their medications, their bills, their paychecks, and more,” Porter McConnell, Take on Wall Street, said September.

DeJoy’s actions last year also seemed to be politically beneficial to Trump and congressional Republicans. He was widely criticized for his actions last year. His orders to demontile sorting machine at all post offices across the nation were grantedThis was a move that undoubtedly slowed mail deliveries at a moment when millions of Americans were sending in ballots by mail for the 2020 presidential election.