New deputies will now fill long-vacant senior posts across the government, including at the U.S. Agency for International Development (where Mark Andrew Green was confirmed as administrator), the Department of Homeland Security (where Claire M. Grady was waved through as undersecretary for management), and the Treasury Department (where David Malpass was approved as undersecretary for international affairs).

[See the number of nominees who are confirmed and pending for Trump administration posts]

[ At August recess, Trump remains behind on confirmations]

The pace of nominations picked up in recent weeks. But the eleventh-hour action in Congress still leaves the Trump administration way behind its predecessors in staffing the government’s senior leadership ranks, the people who are tasked with pushing the White House’s agenda through.

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President Trump's relationship with Congress has become more and more strained as he struggles to find legislative wins. Now he's going after Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), a key leader in his own party. (Jenny Starrs/The Washington Post)

Even with the 66 nominees confirmed Thursday — bringing the total for the executive branch to 124 — critical leadership positions remain vacant at almost every agency and department in the federal government. Just seven of the 15 Cabinet agencies have their No. 2 leaders in place, leaving day-to-day operations to career civil servants in acting roles.

[Help Wanted: Why Republicans won’t work for the Trump administration]

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, for example, has no deputy in the formal pipeline; the White House has yet to nominate one. The Treasury and Commerce departments don’t either, after candidates for their second-in-command withdrew from consideration. The woman Trump has nominated for the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s No. 2 job, a veteran of the George W. Bush administration, has made it through a Senate committee but missed the docket for Thursday’s vote.

[Recess just started for Congress, and it’s not going to be much fun for Republicans]

The Agriculture and Health and Human Services departments also have no deputies in place. And this week George Nesterczuk, whom the White House put forward to run the Office of Personnel Management, withdrew, citing opposition from federal employee unions and the slow confirmation process. The government’s personnel agency has been without a confirmed director for more than two years.

By the Senate’s August recess in 2009, President Barack Obama’s first term, lawmakers had advanced 310 of the 1,110 positions requiring confirmation, according to data tracked by The Washington Post and the nonpartisan Partnership for Public Service’s Center for Presidential Transition.

At the same milestone in the George W. Bush administration, the count was 294, and 252 during President Bill Clinton’s first term.

[Slow pace of nominees leaves Cabinet agencies stuck in staffing limbo]

Today the average time for the Senate to confirm an appointee is 54 days, a time frame that also lags behind the pace of the Obama, Clinton and both Bush administrations.

The pace of confirmations has, not surprisingly, become embroiled in politics. Paperwork has been slow to reach Senate committees. Trump repeatedly has accused Senate Democrats of blocking votes on his nominees. Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) had been slowing the process to protest the Republican effort to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act, but agreed to move a block of nominees before the August recess.

Among the other nominees confirmed were former senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Tex.) as ambassador to NATO, New York Jets owner Robert Wood “Woody” Johnson as ambassador to Great Britain and Northern Ireland, several U.S. attorneys and top positions at the State Department, Department of Veterans Affairs and the Federal Communications Commission.

Lisa Rein covers federal agencies and the management of government in the Trump adminstration. At The Washington Post, she has written about the federal workforce; state politics and government in Annapolis, and in Richmond; local government in Fairfax County, Va. and the redevelopment of Washington and its neighborhoods.

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