
Veterans Affairs Department Inspector General Cheryl Mason during a Senate hearing on Oct. 29, 2025. She was recently elected as the chair of the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency. Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post/Getty Images
Inspector general group to be led by former Trump administration adviser
A government oversight organization said that the selection of Cheryl Mason, who is the inspector general for the Veterans Affairs Department, shows the White House is “putting more of a thumb on the scale” of the Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency.
A former Trump administration official who is now serving as a department inspector general will soon lead a central group for the watchdogs that the president has previously sought to defund.
The Council of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency on Tuesday announced that Veterans Affairs IG Cheryl Mason has been elected as its next chairperson, beginning April 6 for a two-year term. CIGIE chairs are selected by the more than 70 IGs across the federal government.
Mason was confirmed as an IG by the Senate along party lines in summer 2025. Democrats and good government groups questioned her ability to provide independent oversight of the department because she previously served as a senior adviser to VA Secretary Doug Collins.
She will replace Tammy Hull, the IG for the U.S. Postal Service, who has been serving as acting chair of CIGIE since January 2025.
The Washington Post reported that the CIGIE chair race was uncontested and that Hull was not interested in the position after the Trump administration blocked fiscal 2026 funding for the group. Officials reversed that decision, however, after pressure from Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Susan Collins, R-Maine.
Still, the news outlet found that CIGIE is now required to request funding every quarter from Trump officials.
“The administration is putting more of a thumb on the scale of CIGIE,” said Faith Williams, the director of the Effective and Accountable Government Program at the Project on Government Oversight nonprofit.
Williams argued that Mason’s selection and the quarterly funding approval requirement will “further marginalize” the central watchdog group, which provides training to IG employees and reviews allegations of wrongdoing against the oversight officials.
“CIGIE helps IGs become the most effective they can be, but we also need some kind of back stop for these inspectors general,” she said. “They should be independent from political interference, not necessarily independent from the guidelines and ethics standards that we hold them to.”
Since the start of his second term, Trump has fired 19 IGs, including at the VA. Most of the president’s nominees who have been confirmed to serve in the oversight role have previously worked in his administration.
Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., has introduced legislation that would prohibit the president from nominating an individual who has previously served as a political appointee in their administration to an IG position. The senator specifically cited Mason’s confirmation as an example of why her measure is necessary.
In a statement to Government Executive, Duckworth also criticized Mason’s selection as CIGIE chair.
“If the goal of this appointment is to curry favor with the Trump administration, IG Mason is certainly a clever pick,” she said. “Unfortunately, all the qualities that make her well suited to appeal to Trump political appointees — namely being one herself who advised Secretary Doug Collins — are the same qualities that render IG Mason unfit to effectively serve as an independent watchdog.”
Additionally, ethics groups and Democratic lawmakers have argued that Labor IG Anthony D’Esposito may have violated the Hatch Act due to reported plans that he is preparing for another congressional run.
And Homeland Security Department IG Joseph Cuffari has recently alleged to Congress that officials have “systematically obstructed” his office’s work.
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