Houston Chronicle Sunday

Cabinet picks serve notice to Washington

Trump’s selections meant to unnerve bureaucrac­ies

- By Michael D. Shear

They are President-elect Donald Trump’s disrupters.

Seven men and one woman named by Trump to run vast government agencies share a common trait: Once they are confirmed, their presence is meant to unnerve — and maybe even outright undermine — the bureaucrac­ies they are about to lead.

Some of those chosen — 17 picks so far for federal agencies and five for the White House — are among the most radical selections in recent history. Other presidents’ nominees, even when controvers­ial, were often veterans of the Washington bureaucrac­y and generally believed in it. But a number of Trump’s most important selections have no experience in federal government and a great drive to undo it.

Scott Pruitt, the Oklahoma state attorney general who was picked to lead the EPA, rejects the establishe­d science of human-caused climate change and has built his career on fighting en--

vironmenta­l regulation­s. At the Education Department, Betsy DeVos wants to steer government money away from traditiona­l public schools. Rick Perry was picked to head the Energy Department — unless he eliminates it, as he once promised.

Rep. Mick Mulvaney of South Carolina, the conservati­ve Republican who was chosen as White House budget director, refused to back the 2011 deal to raise the federal debt limit and helped to bring the United States to the brink of default.

“Donald Trump ran to make the governing people uncomforta­ble,” said Andrew H. Card Jr., who served as chief of staff to former President George W. Bush and as transporta­tion secretary for his father. “He clearly picked people to lead some of these department­s who will be challengin­g to the insiders.”

AsTrumpfin­ishesannou­ncing his choices for Cabinet and senior White House aides, a picture is emerging of an administra­tion with little ideologica­l cohesion and nosinglean­imatingpur­pose.They are neither all conservati­ve, nor all liberal. They are not all insiders or outsiders. Some have known Trump for years. Others met him in the weeks since he was elected.

Instead, Trump has recruited people to lead his government who can be roughly grouped into categories that appeal to the different parts of his psyche. In addition to the disrupters, there are the dealmakers, the loyalists, the establishm­ent and the generals.

Trump’s administra­tion so far reflects the people who worked for and advised him during the campaign. It is mostly men, and mostly white. Many of his picks are extraordin­arily rich, though not all. Loyalty is at a premium — except when it isn’t.

Here is a look at the groups: The disrupters

Few things made Trump’s campaign supporters roar with approval more than when he hammered the “political class in Washington,” telling people at his rallies that the government had betrayed them, and vowing that change was coming.

At many agencies, it may soon arrive. In addition to DeVos, Pruitt, Perry and Mulvaney, the disrupters include Ben Carson, chosen to lead the Housing Department; Andrew Puzder as labor secretary; Rep. Tom Price of Georgia to oversee the Health and Human Services Department; and Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama as attorney general.

The disrupters appear to have been picked in part for their singular ability to shake up the normal course of business at their agencies.

Sessions, whose 1986 nomination as a federal judge was rejected by the Republican-controlled Senate because of testimony from colleagues that he was a racist, is likely to push for wholesale changes at the Justice Department by imposing conservati­ve positions on immigratio­n, terrorism, crime, drugs and guns. He is almost certain to reverse Obamaera efforts to confront civil rights violations, sentencing disparitie­s and police abuses.

Carson, a surgeon who has no experience in housing or running a large government agency, has put housing advocates on notice that he does not think much of current programs for the poor. Puzder, who owns fast-food chains and is opposed to raising the minimum wage, is a longtime critic of his department’s approach. Price, who waged a crusade against the Affordable Care Act in Congress, could soon be in a position at HHSto lead the drive to repeal and replace it.

Trump demonstrat­ed his desire for a disruptive force when he named Pruitt to head the nation’s top environmen­tal agency.

“For too long, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency has spent taxpayer dollars on an outof-control anti-energy agenda that has destroyed millions of jobs,” he said, adding that Pruitt “will reverse this trend.” The dealmakers

As he creates an administra­tion in his own image, perhaps no category is more natural for the author of “The Art of the Deal” than the dealmakers.

Trump, who puts a premium on the ability to negotiate in business and finance, has chosen Wilbur Ross, a billionair­e investor, to lead the Commerce Department; Steven Mnuchin of Goldman Sachs to lead the Treasury Department; and Rex W. Tillerson, chairman of Exxon Mobil who has a longtime relationsh­ip with President Vladimir Putin of Russia, to be secretary of state.

“To me, a great advantage is he knows many of the players, and he knows them well,” Trump said last week during an interview about Tillerson on “Fox News Sunday.” “He does massive deals in Russia. He does massive deals for the company — not for himself — for the company.”

Mnuchin made a fortune through financial deals and now becomes the nation’s top financial official. Ross, a “vulture” investor on Wall Street, bought nearly dead companies and made huge profits when his turnaround strategies worked. The loyalists

Like most future presidents, Trump has also positioned loyal, trusted aides to be close to him at the White House.

Four of the loyalists — Reince Priebus, who will be White House chief of staff; Stephen Bannon, chief strategist; Donald F. McGahn II, White House counsel; and retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, national security adviser — will occupy the most coveted real estate in the West Wing.

The president-elect has also tapped Linda McMahon, former chief executive of World Wrestling Entertainm­ent, to oversee the Small Business Administra­tion. McMahon has known Trump for years, long before he considered running for president.

All five loyalists stuck by Trump during the toughest of times in the campaign. Priebus, the departing chairman of the Republican Party, came late to joining the Trump team but refused to waver publicly when the Washington establishm­ent was rushing to condemn Trump during various scandals.

Bannon, who has been accused of embracing white nationalis­t views as head of Breitbart News, was always there, whispering advice to Trump in the background, if not officially in charge of campaign strategy. Flynn and McGahn are veterans of Trump’s campaign world, having secured their posts in the administra­tion through longevity.

Loyalty goes only so far, however. Four of Trump’s most avid supporters have no role in the new administra­tion: Chris Chris- tie, governor of New Jersey; Newt Gingrich, former House speaker; Mike Huckabee, former governor of Arkansas; and Rudy Giuliani, former mayor of New York City. The establishm­ent

If there was one group Trump repeatedly derided on the campaign trail, it was the establishm­ent.

It was filled with the “stupid” people who ran the government poorly, Trump said. It represente­d the Washington swamp that he pledged to drain. When it looked like he might not win, he blamed them.

But Trump hasn’t shunned the establishm­ent as he sets up his government. He has chosen Gov. Nikki Haley of South Carolina as his envoy to the United Nations; Rep. Michael Pompeo of Kansas for CIA director; and Elaine Chao as his secretary of transporta­tion.

There are few people who define the Republican establishm­ent more than Chao, who, in addition to having served in Cabinet posts during both Bush administra­tions, is married to Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader. The generals

Ultimately there may be no more direct expression of Trump’s psyche in his administra­tion picks than the generals.

Despite saying during the campaign that he knew more about the Islamic State than generals did, Trump is embracing the retired leaders of the U.S. military.

That explains Gen. James N. Mattis, who was responsibl­e for U.S. military operations in the Middle East as head of U.S. Central Command and is Trump’s pick for defense secretary. It also explains Gen. John F. Kelly, who oversaw U.S. military operations in Central and South America as head of U.S. Southern Command and is Trump’s choice for homeland security secretary. It also may help frame his choice of Rep. Ryan Zinke of Montana, a former Navy SEAL commander, to be interior secretary. While not a general, Zinke served in Iraq, Bosnia, Kosovo and the Pacific.

 ?? Kathy Willens / Associated Press ?? Former Gov. Rick Perry was picked by Donald Trump to serve as energy secretary, leading a department the Texan once vowed to eliminate while seeking the GOP presidenti­al nomination.
Kathy Willens / Associated Press Former Gov. Rick Perry was picked by Donald Trump to serve as energy secretary, leading a department the Texan once vowed to eliminate while seeking the GOP presidenti­al nomination.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States