Postal worker unions and their mostly Democratic allies in Congress sometimes portray Darrell Issa as a malevolent figure bent on destroying the U.S. Postal Service. They point to what they considered a highly partisan bill that the Republican representative from California introduced in 2011, which would have treated the money-losing USPS as if it were bankrupt and created a commission to shutter postal facilities. The Issa bill received some good press, including a favorable nodfrom the Washington Post’s editorial page. Still, much to the relief of Issa’s foes, the bill went nowhere.
On Thursday, Issa made it harder for his critics to caricature him. He released a draft version of a new postal reform bill. It has some of the same elements in his earlier one—but the chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, which has jurisdiction over the USPS, has softened his positions on others. If he’s bent on anything this time, it seems to be striking a bipartisan deal.
He’s abandoned his plan to create a board modeled after the Defense Base Realignment and Closure Commission (BRAC) to shrink the postal service’s physical infrastructure. Senior oversight committee aides say this is no longer necessary because U.S. Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe is moving ahead with his own plan to close as many as 200 mail-processing centers around the country and reduce hours of operation at money-losing post offices.