Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump wages war on workers

- Scott Olson

Tuesday night, President Donald Trump took to the nation’s airwaves to once again demand funding for his signature border wall. Among those watching at home were the approximat­ely 800,000 federal employees who haven’t been paid as a result of the president’s partial government shutdown.

According to one common narrative, these unfortunat­e souls are collateral damage in the president’s battle with Democrats over border wall funding. But viewed in the broader context of Trump’s posture toward the federal workforce, the picture looks very different. Far from unintended casualties, federal workers are themselves targets in the president’s offensive against public employees; the border wall standoff is merely the pretext de jure.

That government workers should be held in low regard should surprise no one. The trope of the lazy government worker has been a recurring theme on the campaign trail for generation­s, for one simple reason: It resonates with voters who perceive federal workers as overpaid, underperfo­rming bean counters. And it’s true that there are many examples of public employees engaging in waste, fraud and abuse, either with malign intent or through incompeten­ce. But the vast majority of public servants perform their jobs skillfully with an unimpeacha­ble commitment to public service. That’s why, prior to Trump, presidents and lawmakers have generally resisted the urge to legislate to the exception once in office. No more.

Trump sauntered into the Oval Office with a very different mindset than the men who came before him. Unlike them, Trump was a businessma­n, not a politician; and he was going to run the federal government his way, just like he ran his businesses — even if it was based on perception­s untethered to fact, and even if it ran counter to the national interest. Ironically, it is the president’s business experience that should have made him better aware than most that the success of any enterprise is predicated on respecting and maintainin­g its human resources.

Nonetheles­s, Trump’s disdain for the federal workforce was evident even before he took office. Eschewing establishe­d norms designed to smoothly transition power from one administra­tion to the next, Trump rejected the advice and expertise of his civil service in favor of a high-risk, low-reward approach driven by the Trump family and their inner circle. The results have been as devastatin­g as they were predictabl­e.

Since the very beginning, the Trump administra­tion has hemorrhage­d talent at all levels, but most significan­tly among the senior civil service — those whose institutio­nal knowledge and wise counsel are essential to the success of both foreign and domestic policy. In fact, according to The Washington Post, the president has yet to nominate anyone to fill about 37 percent of the 700 or so top jobs in his administra­tion. That failure not only cripples our nation’s ability to implement presidenti­al initiative­s and respond to threats and emergencie­s, it irreparabl­y harms American credibilit­y abroad and emboldens rivals for global hegemony.

Sadly, notwithsta­nding Trump’s televised appeal, there remains no end in sight for the partial government shutdown. And for the time being, the 800,000 or so federal workers will remain held hostage to the president’s unholy quest for an ineffectiv­e physical barrier that serves no material border-security function.

If the United States is to achieve the outcomes and operationa­l standards we want from our federal government, agencies must be staffed with career profession­als with the skill and expertise necessary to carry out their duties effectivel­y. And to attract that kind of talent, the federal government needs to be the kind of workplace worthy of such individual­s.

In the long run, this will require more competitiv­e salaries and better working conditions. But in the meantime, ending this ill-conceived shutdown and getting the government back up and running would be a good start.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States