The Palm Beach Post

Government tussle: Who’s the worst Trump minion?

- Gail Collins She writes for the New York Times.

The other day Scott Pruitt, the EPA chief and well-known candidate for Worst Person in Washington, tossed some reporters out of a public conference on water contaminat­ion.

Way to rehabilita­te your image, Scott!

Pruitt has been in a long-running battle with Education Secretary Betsy DeVos for the title of most terrible Trump minion. (Now, of course, we’ve also got John Bolton. But this is the weekend, and I don’t want you to spend it contemplat­ing nuclear warfare.)

Let’s see who’s currently in the lead. On her side, DeVos has been hard at work dismantlin­g the special Department of Education team that investigat­es fraud by for-profit colleges. While the secretary is deeply into the idea of substituti­ng private schools for public ones, she is deeply unenthusia­stic about any quality control.

Some people feel DeVos is flat-out hostile to public schools. To prove she loves all education the same, DeVos made a major trip to New York City this month, where she visited ... two yeshivas.

OK, this is a close competitio­n. Feel free to argue about it during your Sunday barbecue.

About Pruitt’s tussle with the press: The AP reported EPA guards grabbed its reporter “by the shoulders and shoved her” out of the building. Later, the department apologized and let everyone back in the conference. But what do you think Pruitt was afraid of ? That the media would find out he’s in favor of contaminat­ed water?

Pruitt has a long and fabled history of trying to make taxpayers underwrite his fondness for firstclass air travel. DeVos has never scored headlines on that front, perhaps because she has her own plane.

Most of DeVos’ own personal bad behavior is on the policy front. “She guts the funding for after-school programs and uses it to fund private school vouchers,” said Rep. Nita Lowey, the top-ranking Democrat on the committee that tracks education budget proposals.

During her trip to New York, DeVos gave a talk to a Catholic group, in which she seemed to suggest there was absolutely nothing whatsoever good to be said about public schools. The system, she assured Cardinal Timothy Dolan and other distinguis­hed guests, was “failing too many students.”

Issue-wise, DeVos might have the terriblene­ss edge, although Pruitt has been working on a wide range of awful initiative­s that could endanger everything from clean air to the sockeye salmon. However, he really does seem to spend most of his personal time building a mountain of stupid, seamy scandals.

For instance, during a recent appearance before a Senate committee, Pruitt was asked whether he had compensate­d an aide who worked off-hours looking for an apartment for her boss.

Since we have probably not seen a public official more desperate for freebies since the Teapot Dome scandal, I think you can guess that the answer was no.

“Then that’s a gift,” said Sen. Tom Udall of New Mexico. “That’s in violation of federal law.”

The aide in question, Millan Hupp, picked out an apartment for Pruitt that was a huge bargain, its stellar qualities only slightly marred by the fact that it was owned by the spouse of a lobbyist who works on environmen­tal issues.

Got to admit, he seems like the winner. Although it’s just for the weekend. God knows what DeVos has up her sleeve.

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