Rome News-Tribune

Trump transition tests outsider’s governing ability

Donald Trump’s political stumbles are due in part to extraordin­ary understaff­ing and inexperien­ce within his organizati­on.

- By Steve Peoples Associated Press

WASHINGTON — His status as a presidenti­al nominee barely a week old, Donald Trump is already tasked with assembling a complex transition team capable of hiring thousands of high-level government officials and crafting a detailed policy agenda should he win the presidency.

It’s a herculean task that will test the limits of Trump in particular, a political outsider who, thus far, has struggled to attract experience­d talent to his presidenti­al campaign. Experience­d officials warn that the safety and economic security of the nation depends on both White House contenders aggressive­ly preparing for the transition to a new presidency in the coming weeks, even as they intensify their political operations for the three-month sprint to Election Day.

The New York billionair­e has shrugged off recent political stumbles that were created, in large part, by extraordin­ary understaff­ing and inexperien­ce within his bare bones organizati­on. Yet there is less room for error as the responsibi­lity shifts from

Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally Friday in Colorado Springs, Colo.

winning an election to governing the world’s most powerful nation.

“If you aren’t preparing, then the American public should be concerned about whether Evan Vucci / The Associated Press

you’re fit to lead,” said Partnershi­p for Public Service CEO Max Stier, who is helping both campaigns with transition planning through the non-profit’s Center for Presidenti­al Transition. “The point of maximum vulnerabil­ity is when there is that handoff of power.”

Trump and his rival Hillary Clinton open formal transition offices on Monday in the same Pennsylvan­ia Avenue building close to the White House, accommodat­ions funded by taxpayers as part of $13 million Congress appropriat­ed for pre-election planning. The White House said Friday that chief of staff Denis McDonough informed the campaigns that Trump and Clinton are now eligible to receive intelligen­ce briefings from the government. McDonough said senior White House officials will be in touch with both campaigns in the coming weeks.

Trump has entrusted much of the transition planning to New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, his transition chairman, along with two longtime Christie loyalists, fundraisin­g chief Bill Palatucci and former chief of staff Rich Bagger. Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, a real estate developer, is also playing an active role along with Jamie Burke, who played a senior role in Mitt Romney’s transition team four years ago.

Trump’s team has identified experts in major policy areas such as foreign affairs, national security and economic affairs to help build out the transition, but those familiar with preparatio­ns to date describe them as preliminar­y at best.

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