Contracting by Tweet: What Impact Can the New Administration Have on Existing Contracts and Future Awards?

Trump tweets government contractsAmong the many subjects to receive President-elect Trump’s attention in advance of his swearing in on January 20 are venerable defense contractors and their performance of major systems contracts.  The Boeing Company (Boeing) and Lockheed Martin (Lockheed) have both felt the “heat of the tweet” – Boeing for the projected cost of the next generation of presidential aircraft and Lockheed for its F35 Joint Strike Fighter.  The pointed attention has led some to question the authority of a president to alter existing contractual relations or to impact the award of future contracts.  Can a president require contractors to lower prices on existing contracts or direct that future awards not be made to companies that fail to adopt practices the president favors, e.g., retaining jobs in the United States?  A president always has the bully pulpit to pressure high-profile government contractors to “voluntarily” take actions to their detriment and in favor of the government, but what legal tools or contractual remedies are available if a president forces a particular outcome?

The legal obligations of the United States to its contractors, with some exceptions, is little different from the obligations of a buyer in a private contract.  The courts long ago established that the United States as buyer must “turn square corners” when dealing with its contractors.  Maxima Corp. v. United States, 847 F.2d 1549 (Fed. Cir. 1988).  There also exists in every government contract a duty of good faith and fair dealing.  See John Cibinic, Jr., James F. Nagle, Ralph C. Nash, Jr., Administration of Government Contracts 296-314 (4th ed. 2006).  Aspects of government contracts that make them different from commercial contracts, e.g., socio-economic provisions that promote specific government policies, do not alter the basic and implied duties of a buyer to a seller.  The written contract captures the exchange of promises of the parties and embodies all express and implied duties and remedies for their breach.

With this as background, could the new president require that Boeing or Lockheed, for example, unilaterally reduce the prices for their aircraft or face adverse consequences?  First, authority to bind the U.S. Government to contracts, or amendments to contracts, is housed in authorized contracting officers.  See FAR 1.602-1.  Contracting officer authority is delegated from agency heads to government employees considering their experience in government contracting and administration, their education or special training in business administration, law, accounting, engineering, or related fields, their knowledge of acquisition policies and procedures, and their completion of acquisition training courses.  FAR 1.603-2.  Once authority is delegated, contracting officers are to act independently while ensuring that contractors receive impartial, fair and equitable treatment.  See Schlesinger v. United States, 390 F.2d 702 (Ct. Cl. 1968); see also FAR 1.602-1.  While contracting officers can and should look to others for advice, including to higher-ups, see FAR 1.602-2(c) (“Contracting officers shall . . . [r]equest and consider the advice of specialists in audit, law, engineering, information security, transportation, and other fields as appropriate”), the decision of a contracting officer must remain that of the contracting officer.

This is not to suggest that contracting officers are immune to pressure from government officials in influential positions, including the president.  However, contracting officers are bound to apply the law when awarding and administering contracts.  See FAR 1.602-1(b) (“No contract shall be entered into unless the contracting officer ensures that all requirements of law, executive orders, regulations, and all other applicable procedures, including clearances and approvals, have been met”); FAR 1.602-2 (“Contracting officers are responsible for . . . ensuring compliance with the terms of the contract”).  Contracting officers are allowed wide latitude to exercise business judgment which might provide an avenue for a contracting officer to accommodate certain presidential desires but the contracting officer must nonetheless operate within the constraints of the law and the terms of any existing contract.  Id.

The classic tool the government has when it finds an existing contract no longer in its interest is the termination for convenience.  See FAR 52.249-2(a) (fixed price contracts); 52.249-6(a)(1) (cost reimbursement contracts).  What constitutes the government’s “interest” is very broad.  Surely, a contracting officer could find it in the government’s interest to terminate a contract for a major system that the contracting officer deemed, perhaps because of encouragement from the top of the executive branch, to be too expensive.  However, a termination for convenience is not cost free to the government.  Contractors terminated for convenience are entitled to recover their cost incurred to the date of the termination, profit or fee on that cost, and termination settlement expenses.  FAR 52.249-2(g); 52.249-6(h).  In addition, the termination of any contract where there is a continuing requirement is a drastic action.  The government would need to begin a new procurement to satisfy the requirement, conduct the procurement pursuant to law, including obtaining full and open competition unless an exception existed, and begin a program all over again.  Practically, the government is unlikely to take this path because it would be costly and delay ultimate delivery of the system.  Thus a contractor willing to endure the public approbation of being identified with “fraud, waste and abuse” likely can survive simply because the consequences of terminating a contract are so drastic.

An even more drastic government approach would be for the government to terminate an unpopular contract for default.  This would absolve the government of all monetary obligations for the termination.  This may sound exceedingly extreme, but the history of the longest-running and largest termination for default in the Department of Defense’s history, the Navy’s A-12 aircraft, shows that an over-budget contract that became politically unpopular can meet such a fate.

For new contracts, the government has the ability to set requirements and select the awardee.  Could the government establish a requirement that all companies who ship jobs overseas are excluded from government contracting?  Or more subtly, could a bias against such companies infect the selection process?

The out-going Obama Administration in its latter stages liberally used the president’s Executive Order power to implement socio-economic policies for government contractors.  Typically, these policies were ones likely to face opposition in the Republican-controlled Congress.  Using the president’s power over contracting, President Obama issued Executive Orders that led to new requirements on paid sick leave, fair pay and safe workplaces, and LGBT rights.  There seems no reason that the Trump Administration might not attempt this same path to limit awards to contractors who do not fit the Administration’s view of “Making America Great Again.”

Such an attempt might run into problems, however.  The Obama Administration’s Executive Orders affirmatively imposed new social requirements on contractors where those requirements were not prohibited by law or regulation.  A Trump Administration Executive Order prohibiting contract awards to companies who move jobs overseas, for example, might run squarely into the Competition in Contracting Act’s (CICA) mandate for “full and open competition.”  Although CICA contains exceptions to full and open competition, promoting US jobs by discouraging offshoring is not one of them (although awards to inverted domestic corporations are prohibited by statute and regulation, see FAR 9.108-2).

Finally, bias in source selection for new contracts is difficult to detect.  Every selection official, indeed every human, has biases, but as a matter of law, those biases cannot lead to an award inconsistent with solicitation selection criteria.  See FAR 15.303(b)(4).  Unwarranted bias in the procurement process is controlled through the bid protest, a review by a third-party to determine whether a selection authority acted arbitrarily, capriciously, or abusively, or not in conformance with law.  See FAR part 33.  A source selection authority influenced by desires of a new president that were not included in a solicitation could be brought to task through the bid protest process.

The new Administration is not without power to influence government contracting and contractors through the bully pulpit.  From a purely legal standpoint, however, the Administration’s powers are circumscribed by the remedies available to contractors and challenges that prospective offerors can bring through the bid protest process.  We shall see how the Trump Administration proceeds and report further if there are any developments.

© 2017 Covington & Burling LLP

Senator McCain Renews Focus on Ending Cost-Plus Contracts

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A longtime and well-known proponent of defense acquisition reform, Senator John McCain assumed the chairmanship of the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee (“SASC”) on January 6.  Sen. McCain has been particularly outspoken concerning cost overruns on major systems procurement projects.  He has characterized the “cost-plus” contract structure as among the key causes of these overruns, and has described implementing a ban on “cost-plus” contracts as among his top three priorities for the 114th Congress (along with countering cyber-threats and addressing sequestration).

Sen. McCain’s antipathy toward cost-plus contracts is nothing new:  during the 2008 presidential campaign, he made waves in the contracting community by declaring during a debate with then-Senator Barack Obama that “particularly in defense spending, which is the largest part of our appropriations – we have to do away with cost-plus contracts.  We now have defense systems [in which] the costs are completely out of control. So we need to have fixed-cost contracts.”

Sen. McCain renewed his criticism of cost-plus contracts in a recent public appearance:  “I’m continuing to try to ban them [a]ll. . . If you don’t ban them, here’s what happens:   [contractors] come in with a lowball contract, so they can get the contract, and then . . . the costs mount.”  By way of analogy, the veteran lawmaker highlighted the faulty incentives he believes are created by such an arrangement:  “If you had a roof that leaked would you ask a guy to come and fix it with a cost-plus contract?!”

At the time of Sen. McCain’s 2008 high-profile criticism of cost-plus contracts, many experts in the contracting community expressed skepticism that an outright ban was desirable or even possible.  They posited, for example, that cost-plus contracts can be the best tool for the job in certain circumstances, such as high-risk research and development projects where the requirements (and thus the expected costs) are ill-defined.  A prominent contracting official even contended, as summed up by one think tank’s analysis of the issue, that “contractors would simply not bid on high-risk endeavors . . . if they were operated under fixed-priced contract structures.”

While the merits of cost-plus contracts remain a subject of vigorous debate, the Arizona senator’s SASC chairmanship and his party’s control of the Senate better position him to pursue this issue in 2015.  In addition, other key stakeholders appear favorably disposed toward defense acquisition reform.  Representative William “Mac” Thornberry, the new chairman of the U.S. House Armed Services Committee, has been studying the issue and collaborating with industry on recommendations.  Additionally, Ashton Carter, President Obama’s pending nominee to be the next Secretary of Defense, is a former chief acquisitions official at the Pentagon and a proponent of reform.

Acquisition reform figures to play a prominent role in Carter’s upcoming confirmation hearing, although the most likely forum for a specific proposal on cost-plus contracts is the FY2016 National Defense Authorization Act (“NDAA”).  One factor to watch as the NDAA process gets underway is whether Sen. McCain is able to build bipartisan support in Congress – and identify key allies across the aisle, and across the Hill – for the reform or elimination of cost-plus contracts.  Outgoing SASC Chairman Carl Levin, who co-authored a symposium-style report on defense acquisition reform with Sen. McCain in October 2014, has retired from Congress.  Also recently departed from the Hill is Representative Henry Waxman, whose proposal to require agencies to minimize cost-plus contracts passed the House in 2008.

It thus remains uncertain how Sen. McCain plans to realize his vision of ending cost-plus defense contracting.  However, given the emphasis that the new SASC chairman has consistently placed on the issue, cost-plus contracts will likely remain a prominent topic within the broader and seemingly dynamic context of acquisition reform in the 114th Congress.

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Department of Defense Contractors Agree to Pay the U.S. Government $5.5 Million for Allegedly Supplying the Military with Low-Grade Batteries for Humvee Gun Turrets Used in Iraq; Minnesota Whistleblower to Receive $990,000

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On September 16, 2014, the Department of Justice (DOJ) announced that Department of Defense (DOD) contractors, M.K. Battery, Inc. (M.K. Battery), East Penn Manufacturing Company (East Penn), NPC Robotics, Inc. (NPC), BAE Systems, Inc. (BAE) and BAE Systems Tactical Vehicle Systems LP (BAE) had agreed to a settlement of $5.5 million for allegedly violating the False Claims Act (FCA) by selling the U.S. Military substandard batteries for Humvee gun turrets used on military combat vehicles in Iraq. Minnesota whistleblower, David McIntosh, former employee of M.K. Battery, will receive $990,000 which represents his share of the settlement for reporting fraud against the government – in this case misrepresentation of a vital product supplied to the DOD.

A gun turret is a weapon mount that protects the crew or mechanism of a projectile-firing weapon and at the same time lets the weapon be aimed and fired in many directions. Sealed acid batteries are used as a backup to turn the turrets on the Humvees in the event that the engine gives out.  According to Mr. McIntosh, and unbeknownst to the Army, the manufacturing process of the batteries was allegedly changed from the original design presented to the DOD, consequently cutting the battery’s life span by as much as 50 percent and potentially putting U.S. Troops in harm’s way.  Mr. McIntosh, from Stacy, Minnesota, who at the time was employed by M.K. Battery as a regional sales representative, brought his concerns to top company officials at M.K. Battery.  However, in 2007 after numerous unsuccessful attempts to convince M.K. Battery that its decision to cut costs on these batteries could be hazardous to U.S. Troops, especially during combat, Mr. McIntosh alerted the DOD to this matter.  Three month later, M.K. Battery fired Mr. McIntosh.

Shortly thereafter, Mr. McIntosh and his attorneys filed the lawsuit under the whistleblowersprovisions of the False Claims Act, which is one of the most effective methods that the government has implemented for combating fraud. Under the FCA, any person, who knows of an individual or company that has defrauded the federal government, can file a “qui tam” lawsuit to recover damages on the government’s behalf.  Mr. McIntosh filed this particular lawsuit on behalf of himself and the Department of Defense. Additionally, a whistleblower who files a case against a company that has committed fraud against the government, may receive an award of up to 30 percent of the settlement. In this case, Mr. McIntosh’s share of $5.5 million is approximately 18 percent of the settlement.

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