President-elect Donald Trump continued to stock his cabinet like a trout stream.[1] His picks elicited complaints that his cabinet lacks ideological coherence. Or, alternatively, they’re all of one “authoritarian” mind, just like Trump himself.[2]
For Attorney-General2.0, he nominated Pam Bondi, a former Attorney-General of Florida. Bondi is already disdained by some for having derided Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s inquiry into Russian meddling in the 2016 election.
Having nominated the anti-vaxxer Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. to run the Department of Health and Human Services, Trump then nominated Dr. Janette Nesheiwat to be Surgeon General; Dr. Martin Makary to head the Food and Drug Administration (FDA); and Dave Weldon to head the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
Most of these nominations set off alarm bells among Democrats, although not so much as had Matt Gaetz.[3] All the health nominees were decried as holding “ideas that are outside the medical mainstream.” Doctors and scientists fear “the injection of politics into realms once reserved for academics.” For her part, Attorney-General nominee Bondi was guilty of “rabid partisanship” while she was Florida’s Attorney-General. Now Bondi will be the “most dangerous” Attorney-General the country has ever had.[4]
Trump has promised to shut down the Department of Education (DOE) and return responsibility entirely to the states.[5] What does the DOE do? It directs federal tax (or borrowing) dollars to low-income school districts filled with low-income (and often low-performing) students; and it manages university student loan programs. Republicans think American public schools perform badly. Republicans think bureaucratized school systems and unaccountable teachers are the source of the problem. Republicans think that the solution to these problems are education vouchers, charter schools, and eliminating the DOE. Trump nominated Linda McMahon as Secretary of Education. McMahon knows a lot about entertainment (specifically pro wrestling), but not much about education. Maybe Trump anticipates a cage fight with people with Education degrees.
Republicans also think that American universities are messed-up. In their view, the liberal arts and humanities faculties are leftists propagandizing young people.[6] So the many leftists in the liberal arts and humanities are alarmed at the government using money and accreditation to get them in a Full-Nelson. The reality is that the vast majority of undergraduates are pursuing degrees in business or other professions. Liberal arts “core” requirements are much reduced compared to earlier times. And you have to be listening to get propagandized. The hyper-ventilating on both sides is uncalled for.
Probably will make people pine for the “chaos” of the first Addams administration.
[1] “Trump fills out his Cabinet with loyalists and billionaires,” The Week, 6 December 2024, p. 4.
[2] Writing this stuff so soon after the election must be like eating sand.
[3] What could?
[4] This would make her more dangerous that Roger Taney, Roger B. Taney – Wikipedia; or A. Mitchell Palmer A. Mitchell Palmer – Wikipedia Big shoes to fill.
[5] “McMahon: Will she dismantle DOE?” The Week, 6 December 2024, p. 16. So, like control of abortion.
[6] Nothing really tops George Wallace’s denunciation of “pointy-headed intellectuals who can’t even park their bicycles straight on the campus.”