IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Kellyanne Conway didn't belong on the Air Force Academy board

Biden was right to disrupt what has long been a broken advisory board system.
Image: White House senior counselor Kellyanne Conway speaks to the media in the briefing room on Jan. 10, 2020.
Then-White House senior counselor Kellyanne Conway speaks to the media in the briefing room on Jan. 10, 2020.Alex Wong / Getty Images file

President Joe Biden is cleaning house. On Wednesday, the White House asked for resignations from more than 10 of former President Donald Trump's appointees to boards that advise three military service academies. It’s an unprecedented move from Biden — and absolutely the correct one.

But to hear the soon-to-be-fired board members gripe about it, you’d think Biden had overturned a core principle of American democracy. The loudest of these voices so far has been Kellyanne Conway, a former senior counselor to Trump. Conway was never in the U.S. Air Force. She has no real connection to the service — but in the closing weeks of the Trump administration, she was given a position on the Air Force Academy Board of Visitors.

She’s yet to attend a single meeting of the board: The last one was held Nov. 18. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin hit pause on new meetings early this year when he instituted a “zero-based review” of 40 advisory committees that provide nonbinding suggestions to the Pentagon on everything from science to military family readiness. (“Zero-based” is corporate jargon implying the review “starts from zero,” in this case making each board defend its existence and current makeup.)

Well, the results are in, and that means Conway and other Trump appointees to the boards of visitors at the Air Force Academy, U.S. Naval Academy and U.S. Military Academy at West Point are out. It’s a list that includes the likes of retired Army Col. Douglas Macgregor — who once advocated martial law at the southern U.S. border and who was most recently a senior adviser for Trump’s last acting defense secretary — and it’s a list that includes former White House press secretary and “Dancing With the Stars” fifth runner-up Sean Spicer.

The response from the Trump appointees has been particularly spicy given how many of them were unfit for the positions in the first place, with almost all of them refusing to resign. Conway posted her response letter, which accuses Biden of using the decision — which has been in the works for months — as a distraction from the deaths of U.S. service members in Afghanistan.

Meanwhile, former Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought, who late last year tried to make it easier to fire 88 percent of his office’s civil servants, said he plans to pursue legal action over his dismissal from the Naval Academy’s board. As MSNBC columnist Steve Vladeck already pointed out, there’s not a lot of room for any suit here. Appointees serve at the pleasure of the president no matter how long the term is — and the president ain’t happy.

Much of the press coverage has focused on how outside the norm Biden’s action is, given that appointees normally serve in these advisory roles for three years even if an administration changes. Here’s the thing, though: It’s a bad system! Membership on many of these boards is basically a sinecure position, a gift granted to friends of the outgoing president. It’s the equivalent of cashing in Presidential Loyalty Rewards Points at the end of an administration.

It’s the equivalent of cashing in Presidential Loyalty Rewards Points at the end of an administration.

“In many ways, [it] is a vestige of the spoil system, where you have political leaders that are able to hand out these plums, not because somebody has deserved it from the perspective of, they're serving their country or having a particular expertise, but because of the political closeness to the president,” Max Stier, the president of the nonpartisan Partnership for Public Service, told ABC News in December.

We saw similar appointments from Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush at the ends of their terms, albeit with people whose portfolios at least kind of matched up with the institutions. Trump, as per his idiom, pushed that system to its limits last year, even as he was trying to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

A big deal is also being made over the potential politicization of what have traditionally been nonpartisan positions. But, in this case, these roles were filled with hyperpartisans and crackpots as a thank you from a hyperpartisan crackpot. If anything, this is a move back toward the norm, not away from it, no matter what Conway may claim.

I’m sure this won’t be the last of these announcements. My money is on former Trump campaign staffers Corey Lewandowski and David Bossie getting the boot from the Defense Business Board next. And when the time comes, I say to them the same thing I say to Conway, Spicer and Vought: good riddance.