New York Post

WHY THE STATE DEPT. STILL LOVES SOROS

- MIKE GONZALEZ Mike Gonzalez is a Heritage Foundation senior fellow for national security.

THE failure of the Trump administra­tion thus far to staff up the executive branch is hurting the conservati­ve policy agenda and thwarting the will of the voters. And six Republican senators who asked Secretary of State Rex Tillerson to probe whether foreign aid is promoting a progressiv­e agenda around the world just got an abject lesson in how.

They got their answer not from Tillerson or anyone around him, but from a mid-level career official at the Bureau of Legislativ­e Affairs, Executive Secretary Joseph E. Macmanus. He pretty much told the senators to take a hike.

The six — Mike Lee (R-Utah), Bill Cassidy (R-La.), Ted Cruz (R-Texas), Jim Inhoffe (R-Okla.), David Purdue (R-Ga.) and Thom Tillis (R-NC) — had written Tillerson in mid-March requesting an investigat­ion into whether State and the US Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t were using taxpayer money to support a raft of progressiv­e causes with no clear national-security interest.

They also asked him to investigat­e how USAID was working with groups funded by billionair­e George Soros “to push a progressiv­e agenda and invigorate the political left.”

As an example, the senators mentioned how one such group pushed for reforms in Albania that some national leaders feared were “ultimately aimed to give the prime minister and left-of-center government full control over judiciary power.”

But Macmanus didn’t even acknowledg­e the request for a probe. It was just an outright defense of USAID’s work, with sentences like, “The Department of State’s foreign-assistance programs are rigorously designed, implemente­d and monitored to ensure that they are based on core American values.”

In other words, we know what we’re doing, you don’t.

It added at the end, for good measure, “We continuall­y review US foreign-assistance programs, including advancing democracy, human rights and government assistance, to ensure the efficient and effective use of resources are aligned with US national interests and administra­tion priorities. We hope this informatio­n is helpful.”

The exchange has left at least some of the senators convinced that the scarcity of political appointees at State and other department­s has left career bureaucrat­s running the government.

They’re right. Of 553 key positions in the executive branch that require Senate confirmati­on, only 22 have been confirmed so far, according to the Partnershi­p for Public Service. And it’s not just because the Senate is dragging its feet. There are 44 nomination­s awaiting confirmati­on and a whopping 488 awaiting nomination.

Ordinarily, congressme­n from the same party as the administra­tion, or their staff, can ring up political appointees who are sympatheti­c to their policy proposals. In this case, they might have been able to lobby for Tillerson to take a personal interest, or for someone else, say an assistance secretary or a deputy assistant secretary, to help get the investigat­ion started.

Whether you love or hate Trump, it’s clear the policies that won the election on Nov. 8 aren’t being implemente­d.

Trump ran, among other things, on making national-security interests the first (and only) grounds for policy making and on the preference for national sovereignt­y over global governance. He cheered Brexit and encouraged other European states to follow the UK’s lead.

Soros’ Open Society Foundation and network of groups does some good in some places — by fighting Vladimir Putin’s bullying of Ukraine, for example. But Soros also supports worldwide many things conservati­ves find repugnant, such as the legalizati­on of prostituti­on, the drug trade and abortion, and the demonizati­on of Israel.

And Soros supports, above all, the expansion and strengthen­ing of the types of internatio­nal organizati­ons that would limit the ability of nation states to act — the types that are anathema to Trump and his entourage.

The senators wrote that not only do many USAID and Soros activities lack a clear national-security purpose, but they can undermine efforts to build internatio­nal relations that benefit America.

Sen. Lee warned that siding with the left would “ostracize many foreign citizens who have traditiona­lly supported strong relations with the United States. Such division allows aggressive opportunis­ts like Russia space to operate and cause further damage.”

It’s long past time Republican senators were able to get a sympatheti­c voice at the other end of the line at a Republican-run State Department.

It’ s clear the policies that won the election ’ on Nov .8 aren’ t being implemente­d.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States