You would be hard pressed to find a bar in Washington D.C. where you’d find a group of people as ideologically diverse as Donald Trump’s cabinet. He’s got Tea Party veterans mingling with a Kennedy, a Teamsters ally, George Soros’s “protege”, and the former vice-chair of the Democratic Party.
And, yet, on the surface at least, D.C. is uncharacteristically calm. Some anti-abortion groups are agitating about Trump’s decision to nominate Robert F. Kennedy Jr to head up the Department of Health and Human Services, but on the Right, nothing inside the conservative movement resembles a “freak out” at all right now.
“It’s the end of Trump Derangement Syndrome,” says one insider, reflecting on the feverish resistance movement that sprang into action after the President-elect’s 2016 win, creating an arms race for anti-Trump donor cash and media attention. While there’s some “grumbling” about Kennedy and Trump’s pro-union pick for Labor Secretary, nobody wants to “step on the vibes”, one senior activist tells me.
The threat to K Street lobbyists is more obvious, but you wouldn’t know it from the outside. The Chamber of Commerce put out a polite statement congratulating Trump on his victory — after which the incoming President immediately started filling top posts with sworn enemies of the special interests the chamber represents. One long-time lobbyist I spoke with on Monday afternoon said K Street is “scared to death and not saying anything” for fear of retribution.
“The angel of death is hovering and they just want fucking lamb’s blood on their door,” the person added. Everyone is hoping the incoming administration “has bigger fish to fry” than their particular industry.
There is no modern precedent for these nominees. Trump’s first cabinet ruffled no feathers in the Republican Party as he surrounded himself with known quantities with conventional worldviews. Remember Tom Price? Alexander Acosta? How about David Shulkin and Sonny Perdue? Most people certainly don’t, though it’s hard to imagine anyone will have forgotten about RFK Jr in 10 years’ time.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
Subscribe‘Drain the swamp’ sounds less damaging than ‘Derail the gravy train’. But either is well overdue in my opinion. The only question is whether it has to be brutal or more measured.
Whatever happened to David Cameron’s ‘Bonfires’?
Grenfell
Have somehow got sucked into a fascination with US politics and Emily and Megyn Kelly are my go-tos. Great work, ladies!
Watching Megyn get her potty-mouth on and take apart the mainstream media’s reporting on Pete Hegseth gives me hope that journalism (as opposed to the transparent activism dressed up as journalism that we’ve been fed for the last few years) isn’t dead.
“Trump’s pledge to “drain the swamp” of his enemies is more serious than ever before.”
Slight correction: His pledge is to drain the swamp of OUR enemies, the forever-government apparats using the state as their own private fiefdoms.
“This is not the way either major party has viewed presidential cabinets in the past; they were always considered places to park supportive ideologues.”
But it served Lincoln–no slouch in the office–quite well. Doris Kearns Goodwin wrote a whole book on it.
Lincoln, Trump. I like it!
I’m just buying an epic quantity of popcorn.
if nothing changes, then nothing changes. People can’t have it both ways – you cannot whine about the status quo and then whine some more that this bunch deviates from the status quo.
Also, can we please stop with the idiocy of RFK2 or Tulsi or whoever else being Russian agents.
“But there is one thing that knits these characters together: their loyalty to Trump. It would be foolish to assume this will necessarily prevent discord and chaos”.
Well it didn’t last time when Trump headed the league table by a country mile of his selected cabinet who were either fired or resigned.
Summary and analysis of “A Team” turnover in the Trump administration
https://www.brookings.edu/articles/tracking-turnover-in-the-trump-administration/