Texarkana Gazette

Kris Kobach’s chutzpah

- Scott Martelle

Talk about chutzpah. Kris Kobach, the former Kansas secretary of state who helped lead the inane Presidenti­al Advisory Commission on Election Integrity (which discovered diddly), delivered a list of 10 demands to the White House to be met if he were to assume the role of President Trump’s immigratio­n czar, a position under considerat­ion but yet to be created (and which seems likely to go to someone else).

And it’s a doozy of a list. The most revealing demand is that Kobach “serve as the face of Trump immigratio­n policy—the principal spokesman on television and in the media,” according to the list obtained by the New York Times.

Sounds more like the face of naked ambition.

Kobach also sought to extract a promise for a future appointmen­t as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security “unless Kobach wishes to continue in Czar position.”

Read that as, “I’ll see which job gets me more public exposure and decide then.”

He wants 24-hour access to DHS or Defense Department jets to ferry him back and forth to the border—“Czar must be on the border every week”—and home to Kansas on weekends “unless POTUS needs Czar elsewhere.”

Remember, similar trips home on the taxpayers’ dime (though on commercial flights, not government aircraft) helped end Scott Pruitt’s tenure at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency. And access to planes for non-public business isn’t new for Kobach either.

Oh, and Kobach wants to be hired at the highest White House staff salary level, have “walk-in privileges” to the president and a seven-member staff (including, naturally, his own media relations person). One other item on the list: that the president “sits down individual­ly with Czar and the secretarie­s of Homeland Security, Defense, Justice, Ag, Interior, and Commerce, and tells each of the Secretarie­s to follow the directives of the Czar without delay, subject to appeal to the President in cases of disagreeme­nt.”

Uh huh. Perhaps Kobach’s next demand will be: “Mr. President, could you sit on the couch for a bit while I move in behind your desk?”

Kobach has establishe­d himself as such a fringe figure that even the Trumpembra­cing Republican Party doesn’t want him around. He’s made rumblings about running for a U.S. Senate seat from Kansas, a specter that has prompted national party leaders to prepare a “stop Kobach” strategy. Kobach got shellacked by Democrat Laura Kelly in his bid for the governor’s job last year in a state where Republican­s hold a 2-1 registrati­on advantage.

#WINNING.

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