Politics | Barack Obama Obama's Kitchen Has Too Many Chefs President's 32 czars an 'end-run' around Congress: Cantor By Kevin Spak Posted Jul 30, 2009 11:42 AM CDT Copied In this photo provided by FOX News, Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Va., appears on "Fox News Sunday" in Washington, Sunday, July 12, 2009. (AP Photo/FOX News Sunday, Freddie Lee) President Obama has broken his promise to restore the power of Congress “by appointing a virtual army of ‘czars,’” Republican Eric Cantor writes in the Washington Post. The administration now has at least 32 czars—more than Russia ever did—with each spearheading major policy initiatives. That’s an “end-run around the legislative branch of historic proportions,” the House minority whip contends, because the president's czars don’t need to be confirmed. The constitution requires that all “principal officers” of the executive branch be approved by Congress. Well, the czars seem fairly principal. The recently deposed car czar managed the government auto takeover, and the pay czar controls the compensation at the top TARP recipients. It’s “not that President Obama’s reliance on czars is illegal,” Cantor writes. “It’s that we have no idea what they’re doing.” Read These Next A former NFL Pro Bowler has died at age 36. The massive AWS failure exposed a big problem with the internet. A man ended up dead after trying to steal from Spirit Halloween. Marco Rubio struck a controversial deal with El Salvador. Report an error