Every President, when entering office, is required to select a cabinet, 15 government department heads that serve as the President’s closest confidants. These positions include the Secretaries of State and Defense, which like all cabinet appointments have to be approved by the Senate (passing requires a majority vote) in order to be officially confirmed for the position. This process includes background checks of the candidates and several hearings and questionnaires. It was put in place by the Founding Fathers to check the president’s power and prevent them from promoting their own cronies to high-level positions to serve their own interests. Other positions that hold similar levels of power as cabinet members, but don’t have to be confirmed by the Senate, include the Chief of Staff and the White House Counsel.
Less than 24 hours after winning the election, President-Elect Donald Trump began announcing the people that will accompany him to the White House, starting with his Chief of Staff Susie Wiles.
Chief of Staff - Susie Wiles
After graduating from the University of Maryland, Wiles worked for Ronald Reagan's presidential campaign (1980), and then turned to work in Florida politics. As a political consultant, she helped Sen. Rick Scott and Governor Ron DeSantis win their elections. Aftwards, working on and off with the Trump campaign from 2016 to 2020, Susie Wiles became the co-chair for Trump’s 2024 election campaign. Describing her as “tough, smart, [and] innovative,” Trump credited Wiles with helping him win both the 2016 and 2024 elections. Notably, she will also be the first female Chief of Staff.
Attorney General - Matt Gaetz
One of the most controversial picks for his cabinet so far, Trump chose former Representative Matt Gaetz as his Attorney General. The job, which serves as a counselor to state government agencies and legislatures, is also responsible for representing the United States in court and overseeing federal criminal prosecutions. Ironically, Matt Gaetz has been investigated by both the FBI and the Congressional Committee of Ethics for sexual misconduct (trafficking a minor across state lines), illicit drug use, using campaign funds for personal use, and accepting a bribe. He has not been charged for any of these crimes. In choosing Gaetz, Trump is ignoring concerns about the Congressman’s ability to be confirmed by the Senate due to his history. Unfortunately, as Gaetz resigned from Congress on Wednesday, Nov 14, it might prevent the Ethics Committee from releasing the report of their investigation, although the Senate could request it as part of their standard background check.
Secretary of State - Marco Rubio
A rival of Trump in the 2016 election, Florida Senator Marco Rubio is slated to become the first Latino to be the Secretary of State. Currently, he serves as the top Republican on the Senate Intelligence Committee, and has extensive foreign policy experience. Some of his views on current foreign policy include support for Israel’s war in Gaza, a desire to treat Iran as a more dangerous adversary, and considers China the “the largest, most advanced adversary America has ever faced.”
Defense Secretary - Pete Hegseth
Deviating from his usual pick of politicians, Trump chose Hegseth, a Fox News host to lead the Department of Defense. A co-host of "Fox & Friends Weekends”, Hegseth is an army veteran who served in the National Guard and toured Iraq, Afghanistan, and Guantanamo Bay, reaching the rank of Major in the National Guard and earning several medals. While lengthy, his 19 year experience pales in comparison with the current Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, who served in the Army for 41 years, served as the Commanding General of United States Forces, overseeing all operations in Iraq and reached the rank of a 4 star general. Hegseth is also the author of "The War on Warriors: Behind the Betrayal of the Men Who Keep Us Free," which rails against what he calls the "warped, woke, and caustic policies of our current military." Another role required to be confirmed by the Senate, Hegseth is sure to be under pressure in the weeks to come. In addition to being probed about his lack of managerial experience, he will be asked about his white supremacist tattoos.
Health and Human Services Secretary - Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
President-Elect Trump picked Kennedy, a vaccine skeptic and conspiracy theorist, to lead the Department of Health and Human Services, saying that he will take on "industrial food complex and drug companies who have engaged in deception, misinformation, and disinformation." Kennedy ran as an independent in the 2024 presidential election, but dropped out in August and endorsed Trump. As the HHS oversees major health agencies such as the CDC, the FDA and the Centers for Medicare, he will have the opportunity to promote his own version of public health, at contrast with mainstream health and science. Kennedy also believes that large drug and food companies are to blame for an epidemic of chronic diseases prevalent in the United States. A telling sign of his potential impact, major pharmaceuticals such as Roche and Pfizer saw their stock prices drop over 10% since Trump won the presidency, and since Kennedy was announced on Thursday, by another 2% - 4%.
Department Of Government Efficiency - Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy
Musk, CEO of Twitter, SpaceX, and Tesla, and Ramaswamy, entrepreneur and former Republican primary candidate, have been chosen by Trump to jointly head the brand new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). The department will not be a federal agency, but will provide guidance to “dismantle Government Bureaucracy, slash excess regulations, cut wasteful expenditures, and restructure Federal Agencies,” as Trump said in a statement. This follows his, and the general GOP party’s policy of reducing government size to promote free markets. While their department will only exist for 1 and a half years, they will wield a large amount of power, influencing which departments receive funding and which are downsized.
While these are only a small portion of his new cabinet, Trump is set to revolutionize who and how they run the government. Indeed, he is already trying to pass his cabinet members through Congress without a vote, but explaining the intricacies of that will require another full blog.
After Mike Pence’s ‘betrayal’ of Trump during the January 6th insurrection, he has looked for one quality above all in his selection for cabinet posts: loyalty. With a new government, and a Republican held Senate and House, it is impossible to predict what Trump will do once he gets into office but one thing is for sure, it will be interesting.
You can see the full list of Trump’s cabinet picks here.
https://www.npr.org/2024/11/12/g-s1-33773/trump-cabinet-advisers-administration
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/tracking-trump-named-serve-cabinet-administration/story?id=115777302
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/who-might-be-in-donald-trump-cabinet/
https://www.cnn.com/2024/11/14/politics/trump-controversial-cabinet-picks/index.html
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-susie-wiles-chief-of-staff/
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2024/11/13/trump-marco-rubio-secretary-state-foreign-policy/
7 comments:
Interesting is a strong word for this next term. Perhaps it will be more than interesting. Perhaps it will be a spectacle. But overall, I fear that the public will become numb to his antics -- hearing day in and day out on things that simply make no sense can lead people to tune out the news.
Anyways, this cabinet is interesting. A lot of individuals (RFK Jr., Hegseth, Gaetz) selected seem to lack qualifications for their positions and seem to be held negatively by the public. And while Musk and Ramaswamy are billionaires that know tons about managing money, running a company is different than running the government -- in government you share power (or are supposed to).
And while I also don't like the cumbersomeness of bureaucracy, to dismantle the bureaucracy of our government is to remove the safeguards protecting our country from descending into a pool of (perhaps literal) cutthroat competition. As we've learned in class, this bureaucracy is here for a reason -- to prevent the tyranny of the majority, and to ensure that American democracy will continue to live on and be built as a result of compromise rather than force.
Besides cabinet picks, we'll also have to see how Trump handles civil servants -- those working at government posts that are loyal to the Government and not to any one candidate or politician (like FBI agents, individuals working in the Department of Energy, etc.). His plan (as outlined in Project 2025) is to cull these workers and replace them with his own loyalists. We'll see how that goes.
Donald Trump’s proposed cabinet is full of bold and unconventional choices. This may be because he prioritizes loyalty, especially after Mike Pence’s actions, which could be seen as a betrayal. I understand why Trump would like loyal people, but the inclusion of figures like Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy feels out of place. They are both billionaires, making it seem like money can buy a government job. I know there may be no way to prove this, but I also know there is a reason why people call the Senate the “millionaire's club.” Additionally, the Senate will have the power to confirm or reject cabinet appointments which voters determine. A sign that the people can alter checks and balances.
This cabinet is definitely a spectacle. It feels less like a deliberate selection of qualified individuals and more like a showcase of loyalty and personal preference, ‘yes men’ if you will. While loyalty is important, it can’t replace experience or the need for capable governance. The inclusion of billionaires like Musk and Ramaswamy in a non-traditional role to dismantle bureaucracy raises questions about whether this move enhances and prioritizes efficiency or erodes and disregards essential safeguards. This irony continues with Matt Gaetz’s nomination as Attorney General. His blatantly criminal history cast a shadow over his ability to uphold and respect the law. Thus making the Senate confirmation process will be a significant hurdle for Gaetz’s, but only the future can really tell what is going to happen. The light at the end of the tunnel comes in the form of Marco Rubio, a republican figure who (finally) brings experience to the table. Only time will reveal whether this cabinet will deliver effective governance or simply amplify the chaos and controversies of this new term of Presidency.
I really question what the DOGE commission will actually do. Warren remarked that a two-person leadership structure is already inherently inefficient. Musk remarked that government officials would need to email him what they did over the week almost like some weird sort of accountability, but I also think that he greatly underestimates the actual size and role of government and acts like there are just a few "enemies of the state" siphoning off of the government, which in reality has never been the case and is a right-wing method of painting the enemy only to then realize the enemy did not exist (as they will also find with tarriffs, illegal immigration, etc.). I can't wait to see what will happen here: we'll surely get a lot of interesting news cycles over the next 4 years.
Trump's pick for cabinet concerns me in a sense that many of the members are ideologically aligned strictly with Trump's policies and have backgrounds that contradicted the mission of the departments they were appointed to lead. As of now, I don't know what to expect to come out of the next 4 years, but I hope voices of American citizens don't get diminished under this administration.
I think the senate has a crucial role to actually do a deep background research on cabinet candidates as already I see a lack of checks and balances. The question of how much a president has executive power arises, as almost everyday I see Trump building this circle around him that is loyal and supports him for anything. The whole point of checks and balances is to not allow whomever that is in control do whatever they want to do without approval. However, if the people who are supposed to check are under Trump, no checks can be done and may eventually give Trump the ultimate power to do whatever he wants.
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