All three of President Biden’s nominees to the governing board of the U.S. Postal Service have been approved by the Senate, increasing Democratic influence over the agency as its leaders move to overhaul mail operations.

Lawmakers on Friday approved the nomination of Anton Hajjar, former general counsel of the American Postal Workers Union. Ron Stroman, a former deputy postmaster general, and Amber McReynolds, who leads the nonprofit National Vote at Home Institute, were approved earlier this month.

The additions mean that five of the board’s nine members are Democratic appointees.

Anton Hajjar

The Senate on Friday approved the nomination of Anton Hajjar, former general counsel of the American Postal Workers Union, to the governing board of the U.S. Postal Service. Andrew Harnik/Associated Press

The trio take their positions as Postmaster General Louis DeJoy and board Chairman Ron Bloom, a Democrat, pursue a sweeping 10-year overhaul of mail operations. Their planning is meant to protect the agency from a projected $160 billion loss over the next decade.

As part of that, the Postal Service announced Friday it has filed a request with the independent Postal Regulatory Commission commission to raise postage rates at the end of August. That would increase the cost of a first-class stamp from 55 cents to 58 cents.

DeJoy, a major donor to Donald Trump, was accused by Democrats during last year’s presidential campaign of hampering mail service – including delivery of mail-in ballots – to help the then-president’s failed re-election bid. DeJoy denied the allegations.

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He was also criticized for a steep decline of on-time deliveries around the holiday season.

The Postal Service is considering relaxing delivery standards for first-class mail to the farthest reaches of its network, from a one-to-three-day benchmark to a one-to-five-day goal. Postal officials have said 70 percent of mail would still be delivered within three days.

The strategy also includes proposals to consolidate underused post offices and invest in new delivery vehicles.

The agency is seeking advisory opinions from the commission on potential changes to delivery standards and other initiatives. Democrats have blasted the 10-year plan as an unacceptable degradation of mail service and renewed calls for DeJoy to step down.

During a confirmation hearing before a Senate committee last month, Biden’s nominees stressed the need to restore public confidence in the agency through prompt delivery service.


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