Imperial Valley Press

Trump is stocking White House with yes-men

- JOHN L. MICEK

We should have seen this coming. Donald Trump, who thrives on the love of the crowd, who listens to the last person to successful­ly worm their way into his ear and who cannot endure even the most minor of slights, is systematic­ally building an administra­tion of yes-men.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who famously referred to his boss as a “moron,” and who broke with him on Russia and Iran, got the sack via Tweet. He was replaced by CIA Director Mike Pompeo, who shares Trump’s hawkishnes­s on Iran, but who also reportedly harbors a corrosive Islamophob­ia.

Trump, who never enjoyed a close relationsh­ip with his chief diplomat, reportedly wanted to change horses ahead of his meeting with North Korea. As awful as Tillerson was at his job, whether that’s actually a good idea remains to be seen. Meanwhile…

Trump’s longtime body man, John McEntee (a personal aide), got the hook on Tuesday because he’s reportedly under investigat­ion by the Department of Homeland Security for financial crimes.

Tillerson and McEntee followed economic advisor Gary Cohn out the door, and with it, the voice of establishm­ent Wall Street. He broke with Trump over potentiall­y destructiv­e, and most definitely extortive, tariffs on steel and aluminum. Cohn lost a fight with White House trade advisor Peter Navarro, who shares Trump’s protection­ist bent. As the Washington Post reports, Navarro, who was once barred from sending private emails and was reduced to “skulking” in the West Wing, is now ascendant.

White House Communicat­ions Director Hope Hicks, who admitted before a congressio­nal oversight committee to telling “white lies” on Trump’s behalf, also resigned. There, Trump lost one of his closest advisors and confidante­s. Hicks had been with Trump since before the beginning of his political career.

And it’s probably only a matter of time before Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who has been repeatedly voted on and off the island by our reality TV president, finally has enough or is similarly purged.

As The Week reports, Tillerson’s exit through the White House’s madly spinning revolving door adds up to at the 37th staff departure in the 14 months of Trump’s administra­tion. That’s a higher rate than the previous five administra­tions, according to an analysis by The Brookings Institutio­n. Trump has “experience­d such high turnover,” because he “has valued loyalty over qualificat­ions and suffered from a White House that has functioned in a chaotic manner,” Brookings scholar Kathryn Dunn Tenpas concluded. As result, it’s been difficult for Trump “to retain staff and [it has] contribute­d to the governance difficulti­es he has encountere­d,” she wrote. “If history is any guide, staff recruitmen­t and retention during his second year could prove challengin­g as well.”

So who’s left?

Trump’s narrowing inner circle is now comprised of Kelly, who was supposed to serve as a check on the president’s worst excesses, but has dramatical­ly underperfo­rmed in that role; as well as daughter Ivanka Trump, who is a senior adviser when it suits her, and an aggrieved daughter when it does not; and son-in-law Jared Kushner, a secretary of all, but knower of not much, as it turns out. John L. Micek can be reached at his Twitter @ByJohnLMic­ek and email him at jmicek@pennlive.com

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