Published on January 20, 2025
This presidential memorandum addresses a claimed security clearance backlog from the previous administration by granting immediate interim TS/SCI clearances to designated personnel for up to six months. The action empowers the White House Counsel to manage a list of individuals receiving these clearances, including the ability to add or revoke access, while explicitly stating it creates no legal rights or benefits for any party.
The memorandum's broad delegation of clearance authority to the White House Counsel, combined with the lack of specified criteria for clearance decisions, creates a concerning opportunity for politically motivated appointments while bypassing standard security protocols. The six-month interim period, coupled with the ability to "supplement as necessary," effectively allows indefinite circumvention of established security vetting processes, potentially enabling the placement of individuals who would not otherwise qualify for such high-level clearances through normal channels.
While presented as an administrative solution to a bureaucratic problem, this memorandum potentially undermines national security safeguards by creating a parallel clearance system under singular political control. The combination of immediate TS/SCI access and concentrated authority in the White House Counsel's office represents a significant departure from traditional security clearance processes that could have lasting implications for sensitive information protection.
January 20, 2025 MEMORANDUM TO THE WHITE HOUSE COUNSEL SUBJECT: Memorandum to Resolve the Backlog of Security Clearances for Executive Office of the President Personnel The Executive Office of the President requires qualified and trusted personnel to execute its mandate on behalf of the American people. There is a backlog created by the Biden Administration in the processing of security clearances of individuals hired to work in the Executive Office of the President. Because of this backlog and the bureaucratic process and broken security clearance process, individuals who have not timely received the appropriate clearances are ineligible for access to the White House complex, infrastructure, and technology and are therefore unable to perform the duties for which they were hired. This is unacceptable. Therefore, by the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, I hereby order: 1. The White House Counsel to provide the White House Security Office and Acting Chief Security Officer with a list of personnel that are hereby immediately granted interim Top Secret/Sensitive Compartmented Information (TS/SCI) security clearances for a period not to exceed six months; and 2. That these individuals shall be immediately granted access to the facilities and technology necessary to perform the duties of the office to which they have been hired; and 3. The White House Counsel, as my designee, may supplement this list as necessary; and 4. The White House Counsel, as my designee, shall have the authority to revoke the interim clearance of any individual as necessary. This memorandum is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.