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Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Congressional Budget Office: Appointment and Tenure of the Director and Deputy Director


Megan Suzanne Lynch
Analyst on Congress and the Legislative Process

The requirements regarding the appointment and tenure of the CBO director, which are simple and straightforward, are set forth in Section 201(a) of the 1974 Congressional Budget Act, as amended, and codified at 2 U.S.C. 601(a). The Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President pro tempore of the Senate jointly appoint the director after considering recommendations received from the House and Senate Budget Committees. The Budget Committee chairs inform the congressional leaders of their recommendations by letter. The appointment is usually announced in the Congressional Record.

Section 201(a) requires that the selection be made “without regard to political affiliation and solely on the basis of his fitness to perform his duties.” Media reports over the years indicate that the CBO director is selected under informal practices in which the House and Senate Budget Committees alternate in recommending a nominee to the Speaker and President pro tempore of the Senate. These reports also indicate that the Speaker and President pro tempore have adhered to the Budget Committees’ recommendations in making past selections. To the extent that these practices are informal, there may be disagreement with regard to their operation in the future selection of a CBO director.

The director is appointed to a four-year term that begins on January 3 of the year that precedes the year in which a presidential election is held. If a director is appointed to fill a vacancy prior to the expiration of a term, then that person serves only for the unexpired portion of that term. There is no limit on the number of times that a director may be reappointed to another term. Section 201(a) also authorizes a CBO director to continue to serve past the expiration of his term until a successor is appointed. A CBO director may be removed by either house by resolution.

Section 201(a) also provides that the director shall appoint a deputy director. The deputy director serves during the term of the director that appointed the deputy director (and until his or her successor is appointed), but may be removed by the director at any time. The deputy director serves as the acting director if the director resigns, is incapacitated, or is otherwise absent.

Eight persons so far have served as CBO director—Alice Rivlin, Rudolph Penner, Robert Reischauer, June O’Neill, Dan Crippen, Douglas Holtz-Eakin, Peter R. Orszag, and Douglas Elmendorf. The most recent director, Douglas Elmendorf, was appointed on January 22, 2009, to serve out the remaining two years of the term of Peter Orszag, who resigned on November 25, 2008. Elmendorf was reappointed January 26, 2011, to a term that expires January 3, 2015. Eleven persons have served as deputy director; five of them also served as the acting director (for periods amounting in total to about three years). The current deputy director, Robert A. Sunshine, was appointed to the position in August 2007; he served as acting director during the two-month interregnum between directors Orszag and Elemendorf.



Date of Report: March 29, 2011
Number of Pages: 11
Order Number: RL31880
Price: $29.95

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