S-4642-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Sponsored by Chris Van Hollen (D-MD)
What it does
This bill would amend the Foreign Service Act of 1980 to extend recall and reappointment eligibility to career Foreign Service members who were separated from service — not just those who retired. It would require that approved reappointment requests be processed within 180 days and that returning members be incorporated into the next assignment cycle with full standing. It would also require the Secretary of State to submit annual reports to Congress detailing the number, grade, and positions of recalled or reappointed members.
Who benefits
Career Foreign Service officers and specialists who were involuntarily or voluntarily separated (rather than retired) and wish to return to service — a group that may have grown following recent workforce reductions at the State Department. The State Department and U.S. diplomatic operations broadly, if the bill helps restore experienced personnel. Allies and foreign partners who interact with experienced U.S. diplomats. Congressional oversight committees, who would receive new annual reporting data.
Who is hurt
Current Foreign Service candidates and mid-career applicants who may face increased competition for assignments from returning separated members with "full standing." Foreign Service officers already in the assignment cycle who could be displaced or deprioritized. Taxpayers who may bear costs if reappointed members receive back pay, benefits restoration, or pension adjustments. The bill imposes a new reporting burden on the State Department, which may require administrative resources.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Foreign Service represents a highly specialized workforce that takes years and significant federal investment to train, and that separated career diplomats retain irreplaceable language skills, regional expertise, and institutional knowledge. They contend that requiring reappointment within 180 days and full assignment standing removes bureaucratic barriers that have historically prevented qualified officers from returning, strengthening U.S. diplomatic capacity at a time when the State Department has faced significant staffing losses.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that guaranteeing reappointment within 180 days with "full standing" could bypass normal competitive hiring and merit-based assignment processes that ensure the best candidates fill critical diplomatic posts. They contend that the bill's broad eligibility window — five years after separation — may allow officers who were separated for performance or conduct reasons to return without adequate vetting, and that the mandatory timeline could strain the State Department's human resources capacity and displace currently serving officers in the assignment cycle.