How does one characterize the 73 days
of the Trump Transition? Clearly a Herculean
undertaking. But in the spirit of the
times, which require an ability to distill complex matters into 140 characters,
here is my executive summary:
No
unifying; amateur arch-right mega-rich cabinet; Hamilton; Putin-loving hack
denial; conflicts; ACA mess; worst ratings ever! #sad #scary
Expanding my executive summary
“tweet” a bit, Trump’s transition has been a mass of contradictions. After a conciliatory acceptance speech and
meeting with Obama, he has made no attempt to unify a brutally divided electorate. He has taken, at times, a more moderate stance on many
issues than in his outrageous campaign, yet he has populated his cabinet and
key staff positions largely with hardliners. And
he has walked onto the grand global stage with all the deftness of not just a
bull in a china stop, but a blindfolded bull in a china shop with the
lights out. He has deified Vladimir
Putin and insulted just about everybody else, including the entire NATO
alliance. His own hardline cabinet
choices have taken the remarkable step of publicly disavowing many of his
signature programs.
He has realized, more than ever,
that every move he makes will instantly gratify his favorite passion, which is
watching himself on the presumably Very-Large-Screen-TV that by all reports he is
addicted to – and perhaps that provides the motivation for kicking off more
controversies than you can possibly imagine, covering the geopolitical
landscape from China to Russia to UK and Germany and Israel and more. Not even the hit musical Hamilton and legendary Representative and civil rights hero John
Lewis have been spared.
We will focus first on the numbers,
and then provide commentary on why those numbers are the way they are.
Evaluating the Trump Transition by the
Numbers
Trump himself and his transition
have received historically low marks across the board. He is viewed less favorably – by far – than
his three immediate predecessors, well under 50%, which is almost unimaginable,
even below his share of the popular vote (46%).
Trump is performing in a similarly dismal way in terms of how he is
handling his transition and approval of his choices for cabinet and other
senior positions. He will almost
certainly have the lowest approval rating of any recent President at this
Inaugural.
TRUMP TRANSITION MEASURES VERSUS PREDECESSORS
|
||||
Favorability pre-Inaug. (Jan)
|
Approval of Handing of Transition (Jan)
|
Approval of Cabinet & High Level Appts.
|
Approval Rating at Inauguration
|
|
Trump 2016
|
40%
|
44%
|
40%
|
TBD
|
Obama 2008
|
78%
|
83%
|
71%
|
68%
|
Bush 2000
|
62%
|
61%
|
58%
|
57%
|
Clinton 1992
|
66%
|
68%
|
64%
|
58%
|
Source
|
Gallup
|
Pew
|
Pew
|
Gallup
|
One is tempted to attribute some of
this to the increasing divisiveness in our country and not to Trump alone,
until one lingers on the Obama numbers.
Our country was viewed as remarkably divided back then – Obama
essentially ran on it as the primary national issue. “Hope and change” was not about the economy,
it was about the perceived Obama opportunity (since disproven) to “transcend”
the partisan divide.
Trump’s favorability rating did rise
with his election, but that increase was modest and has since leveled and, more
recently declined. It remains
significantly below 50%.
TRUMP FAVORABILITY RATINGS
|
||||
October and pre-Election November
|
Post-Election November
|
December
|
January
|
|
Favorable
|
37%
|
39%
|
45%
|
40%
|
Unfavorable
|
60%
|
58%
|
49%
|
50%
|
Change Fav.
|
n/a
|
+2 pp
|
+6 pp
|
-5 pp
|
Net
|
-23 pp
|
-21 pp
|
-4 pp
|
-10 pp
|
The lack of confidence in Trump’s ability
to handle the Presidency is utterly striking, particularly in the context of
his predecessors. Trump, simply stated,
is viewed dimly when compared to each of them, whether Democratic or
Republican.
CONFIDENCE IN TRUMP VERSUS PREDECESSORS
|
||||
% Somewhat/very confident…
|
Handle an international crisis
|
Use military force wisely
|
Prevent major scandal in his administration
|
Work effectively with Congress to get things done
|
Trump 2016
|
43%
|
47%
|
44%
|
60%
|
Obama 2008
|
73%
|
71%
|
74%
|
89%
|
Bush 2000
|
71%
|
78%
|
77%
|
74%
|
Clinton 1992
|
70%
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
n/a
|
I am currently reading Jean Edward Smith’s
devastating biography of George W. Bush.
It is harrowing to recall – in the context of Trump’s imminent presidency
-- Bush’s lack of curiosity, limited attention span, unwillingness to think
through nuances or even be exposed to contrary opinions, eagerness to make
decisions, disdain for options, desire to have everything boiled down to black
and white, his intense personalization of the presidency, and his willingness
to bend the law and the facts to support his messianic vision of his power. It is hard to read this without feeling that
not only are we repeating this type of presidency, but doubling down on the
worst of Bush’s impulses. At least Bush
(purportedly) read 16 biographies of Lincoln in his time in the White House
(not that much rubbed off).
Presidential transitions usually
cover three essential areas: the
post-election unification of the country, the building of the government (led
and exemplified by Cabinet selections) and the setting of policies,
particularly to define the “first 100 days.”
Let’s look at each in turn.
Unifying the Nation
Trump has approached this
traditional transition task with the thorniest of olive branches ever imagined. His effort in this arena is perhaps best
typified by his New Year’s Eve tweet, which I quote in full: “Happy New Year to all, including to my many
enemies and those who have fought me and lost so badly they just don’t know
what to do. Love!”
He actually got off to a good
start. You will recall his dead-of-night
acceptance speech, which was brief, conciliatory and restrained. He exhibited none of the self-promoting
over-the-top persona we had come to know well.
He was gracious and hit the proper notes. This extended into his meeting with President
Obama days later, in which he lauded a president that he had ridiculed, and
certainly seemed to listen to the substance of Obama’s message, particularly on
health care and the need to sustain at least some aspects of the ACA. The only off-note was that Trump truly seemed
to shrink in the moment, looking more than a little overwhelmed, and seemingly
leaning on the President rather heavily.
But like the several times in the
campaign when it appeared Trump was moving to a more “presidential” mode, this
era of humility and restraint proved impossible to sustain for more than a few
days. Perhaps it was the protests in the
streets, or the Hamilton moment (when
a cast member asked Vice President-elect Pence -- in attendance – to, in
essence, govern on behalf of the whole nation, not just the “base”). But whatever the trigger, the old Trump roared
back, and this familiar Trump has been anything but unifying. He embarked on a “Victory Tour,” rallies
among the faithful, returning to campaign mode, with the same language, the
same arrogance, the same disdain for his “enemies” – and the tour was only
conducted in states he had carried. What
more symbolism does one need?
Trump’s Policies
In the immediate post-Election
period, Trump seemed to walk back nearly every hardline position he had
articulated in the campaign. On health
care, his post-Obama statement indicated a willingness to protect at least
aspects of the ACA (a practical impossibility given that the unpopular parts
pay for the popular ones). On the
environment, he signaled that he would at least review the previously condemned
Paris Accords, perhaps prodded by the closet-liberal daughter Ivanka, a
well-known advocate for confronting climate change. The call for The Wall turned into a
recognition that it might be merely a “fence” in certain areas. And so on.
But again, this has given way to a
return to the hard-line Trump. Obamacare
would be repealed and simultaneously replaced (a trapeze act worthy of the
Ringling Brothers, and destined to follow a similar fate – the circus is
closing and there is no way to reconcile the dozens of GOP proposals on any
kind of rapid timetable). Obama’s
environmental executive actions appear to be ready for the scrap heap, a stroke
of the pen undone as easily as they were enacted. And The Wall is back, in full, albeit on what
Trump now claims will be a “pay later” basis by the Mexicans.
There is irony here, and it is
embodied in Trump’s cabinet picks.
Trump’s Cabinet
Trump’s policy olive branches
stopped at roughly the same time he began to select his cabinet, and that
seemed to be no coincidence.
Democrats, in a display of gallows
humor, have had fun with monikers for the Trump Cabinet. My favorite is “The Worse and the Whitest,”
offered by a friend of mine. Sheldon
Whitehouse, the Senator from Rhode Island, referred to them as “either members
of the arch-right, billionaires or arch-right billionaires, plus some
generals.” He could have thrown in that
a number of them have absolutely no experience in the area to which they are
now assigned, and several others hold views that are essentially antithetical
to the mission of the departments they will (presumably) be leading. One of them once proposed eliminating the
very department that he is now charged to run.
I bet you know who.
We have put together this handy
chart to sort it all through and to dramatize these themes, and compare the
selections to those of George W. Bush.
We have focused only on the highest ranking cabinet offices (though
similar conclusions would be drawn if you looked at every selection of cabinet
rank.) You may quibble with some of the
specific ratings and descriptions, but I don’t believe you can argue with the
conclusion.
Trump
Selections
|
|||
Position
|
Appointee
|
Ideology
|
Experience
|
State
|
Tillerson
|
TBD
|
Low
|
Treasury
|
Mnuchin
|
Establishment
|
Medium
|
Defense
|
Mattis
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Atty. Gen.
|
Sessions
|
Hard Right
|
High
|
Commerce
|
Ross
|
Hard Right
|
High
|
Labor
|
Pudzer
|
Hard Right
|
High
|
HHS
|
Price
|
Hard Right
|
High
|
HUD
|
Carson
|
Hard Right
|
Low
|
Trans.
|
Chao
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Energy
|
Perry
|
Hard Right
|
Low
|
Education
|
DeVos
|
Hard Right
|
Low
|
Veteran Aff.
|
Shulkin
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Home. Sec.
|
Kelly
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Bush
43 Selections
|
|||
Position
|
Appointee
|
Ideology
|
Experience
|
State
|
Powell
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Treasury
|
O'Neil
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Defense
|
Rumsfeld
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Atty. Gen.
|
Ashcroft
|
Hard Right
|
High
|
Commerce
|
Evans
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Labor
|
Chao
|
Establishment
|
High
|
HHS
|
Thompson
|
Establishment
|
High
|
HUD
|
Martinez
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Trans.
|
Mineta
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Energy
|
Abraham
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Education
|
Paige
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Veteran Aff.
|
Principi
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Home. Sec.
|
Ridge
|
Establishment
|
High
|
Bush, of course, led a different
Republican Party, and ran on a platform of “compassionate conservatism,” which
may have struck many as an oxymoron, but he ran as a pragmatist. He filled his cabinet with very experienced
hands and establishment figures. (Ultimately
the hard right influence of a radicalized Dick Cheney became apparent, but that
was hardly clear on Inauguration Day.)
Trump has shown no such compulsion. His Cabinet selections are filled with arch-conservatives
who, on paper (and some in practice) seem intent on fulfilling the worst
excesses of Trump’s campaign rhetoric. And
the praise he received for these selections from the hard right perhaps has emboldened
him to resume the tough talk. He has appointed
many business people and many billionaires, and generals as well, far more in aggregate
than the usual array of career politicians.
Some of Trump’s cabinet picks are
notorious for their inexperience. Rick
Perry has admitted to not even knowing what the Department of Energy actually
does, and now – having been told – he has no interest in abolishing it. (This was the very department he could not
recall – “oops!” -- as he stumbled his way through a debate five years ago). Nikki Haley may be an establishment darling
and future presidential prospect, but she has zero foreign policy experience to
qualify her as an appropriate nominee for UN Ambassador. Dr. Ben Carson helps Trump diversify his cabinet,
but he has zero experience in housing, which is a funny thing to say about the
nominee for HUD. Education Secretary
designate Betsy DeVos may be a huge backer of charter schools, but she has zero
experience in public schools, at all.
And, in a different twist, Scott Pruitt of the EPA is, of all things, a
climate denier.
The national security side is more
promising. There is more of a comfort
level with the men (and they are all men) that Trump has selected. James Mattis in Defense, John Kelly in
Homeland Security and Mike Pompeo at the CIA are all experts in their fields,
at least, and “grown ups” with a belief in post-WWII global security infrastructure.
The big concern here is National Security Advisor Mike Flynn, who is – how else
to say it? – basically a nut. It will be
interesting to see who prevails in the first Mattis/Flynn showdown. I’m betting on “Mad Dog” Mattis, but who
really knows.
But with all these hardline picks, a
funny thing is happening at the hearings.
Many of Trump’s most conservative selections are disavowing or walking
back Trump’s “policies,” particularly on the national security side. Mattis and Pompeo have made it clear they
consider Russia to be an enemy and Putin a villain, and have no interest in a
return to the days of “enhanced interrogation.”
John Kelly sees no need for a wall on the Mexican border. All have reinforced the important and historic
success of the NATO alliance. Mattis
even endorsed the Iran nuclear weapons deal and believes in climate
change. Ryan Zinke, the Interior
nominee, is also a believer in man-made climate change. So the irony remains that while Trump has
returned to a more belligerent and hard right tone in his more recent
statements, he does so while his nominees are openly disagreeing with him on
many of those same issues.
Say one thing for Trump’s picks that
there is no disputing – they are, combined fabulously wealthy. The first dozen people in the line of
succession are all multi-millionaires, most far richer than that, and two of
them – DeVos and Commerce nominee Wilbur Ross, are billionaires. All told the estimate of the Cabinet’s net
worth is in the $13 billion range, more than the entire GNP of 70% of the world’s
countries and about equal to the net wealth of the lower third of American
households. The next level is not on the
food stamp program either, with Linda McMahon at Small Business and Todd
Ricketts, the #2 at Commerce, each in the 9 to 10 digit net worth range. And, of course, Trump himself, who tells us
he is a billionaire, though, of course, we can’t be really sure absent tax
returns, can we?
Controversies
There have been many controversies in
the crash bang of this transition, starting with the strange process of
receiving calls from heads of state, which immediately set off shock
waves. Trump eschewed the traditional
practice of accepting the first congratulatory call from our closest ally,
Great Britain; instead Egypt was first, for no known reason. Australia’s Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull,
flummoxed at the paucity of “normal channels” through which to make his call,
managed to get Trump’s cell phone number from golfer Greg Norman.
But the big news was Trump’s
acceptance of a call from the Taiwanese President, shattering decades of
precedent and signaling either a crafty strategy to upset the Chinese or utter
buffoonery on the part of Trump.
(Naturally, the spin was the former.)
Trump is apparently intent on resetting relations all around the globe –
okay, he’s entitled to try -- but his methods for instigating these resets have
been incredibly clumsy.
But forgetting about these faux pas,
and the dissing of the protesters, and getting in a twitter fight with the cast
of Hamilton, the absolute dominant news of the transition has been Trump’s
infatuation with Vladimir Putin.
Trump has long been fascinated with
Putin, the classic strongman who rides horses bare-chested, has his enemies
shot and killed, and take possession of countries and regions with little
regard for world opinion or the interests of those peoples. During the campaign Trump praised Putin and
compared him favorably to Obama as a leader.
During the transition, intelligence reports made it clear that the
Russians had attempted (rather successfully) to influence the elections through
their hacking of the DNC, which resulted in the WikiLeaks’ publication of John
Podesta’s emails, and that Putin himself was orchestrating this strategy and
its execution.
Politicians, observers and citizens
alike rose up in anger at the Russian meddling, which can be interpreted as an
act of war, certainly cyber war. (Ask
John McCain.) But Trump, mystifyingly,
took it all extremely personally, defending Russia and insisting the
intelligence community was wrong, and that everyone was conspiring to
delegitimize his victory. He did not
seem to realize that he was damaging his relationships with his own
intelligence community, or that he himself had questioned the validity of the
election process time and again during the campaign, and even after he won
(when he claimed that Hillary Clinton had received “millions” of illegal votes,
with no evidence thereof).
Finally, when fully briefed by the
CIA, Trump concluded the Russians were involved but continued to focus on the
fact that there was no evidence that they had tampered with ballot boxes, as if
that was his litmus test for him considering it noteworthy. He seems oblivious to the bigger picture of
Russian aggression.
The other controversy worth
mentioning is the mammoth conflict of interest that the Trump presidency
presents, and how little Trump has done to assuage the very real threats posed
by the confluence of his business interests and those of the country’s. It is hard to underestimate the temptations
Trump (and his Cabinet) will surely face to further personal interest in
setting policy. All you need to do is
watch Al Franken’s grilling of HHS designate Tom Price to understand the
potential, and then add a bunch of zeroes onto one of Price’s transaction to
get the order of magnitude. This Administration
of billionaires has the U.S. Treasury at its disposal and the world economy as
its playground. Vigilance will be
required, and GOP efforts to dismantle ethics offices is not a comforting
start, to say the least, as well as Trump’s ongoing campaign to delegitimize
the media.
What are we left with? As I write this – with literally minutes to
go before the swearing in ceremony -- I can safely say that no one really knows. Trump’s team has been relatively tight-lipped
about his first 100 days, or even the first week, aside from the jockeying over
Obamacare. Trump may roll back some
environmental restrictions, announce lobbying “bans” and the like, but nothing
is really known.
At this point, most observers,
including world leaders, have been left to wonder what any Trump utterance
means – is it random blurting to be ignored?
Crafty mixed messaging to keep his options open? Outrageous opening bids for future
negotiations? Or actual brand new
policy?
But we are certain of two
things.
One is that we can never believe
another feint toward the “presidential” Trump.
He is who he is and that is not likely to change at age 70, especially
with the positive reinforcement that his astounding victory provided to him,
affirmation that he knows all. We just
have to see how it plays out when the games really count.
And the second thing – whatever you
make of Trump and his transition, the American people do not like what they are
seeing -- in record-shattering numbers.
That much is clear. Nothing he
has done has enhanced his standing since Election Day, and an approval rating
below 50% means he is already on notice, and will have a hard time spending
political capital he may not have.
Donald Trump may have shattered half
of the Mario Cuomo truism – that campaigning is “poetry” – but the other half
remains stubbornly true – that governing is “prose.” It’s showtime, and we’ll see how the First Celebrity
Apprentice fares with his appointment not with reality television, but with
reality itself.
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