Washington- That of President-elect Donald Trump Choice of Cabinet and senior officials faces an uncertain future as his selections have received mixed reviews in recent days, even from fellow Republicans — and a handful of them have sent shockwaves through Washington.
Trump’s selection for attorney general in former Rep. Matt Gaetza GOP firebrand who was under House Ethics Committee investigation For allegations of sexual misconduct and obstructionhas drawn criticism from both sides of the aisle. And Trump’s choice for Secretary of Defense in Pete HegsethArmy combat veteran and former Fox News anchor, has also raised concerns, particularly as investigation into sexual assault allegations against him was made public. Furthermore, the former Democratic Representative Tulsi GabbardTrump’s pick for director of national intelligence, has no intelligence experience and has drawn criticism for her views on Russia and other U.S. adversaries.
Appearing on Sunday’s “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” Democratic Representative Jim Himes of Connecticut expressed surprise at those who questioned whether the experiment was necessary when asked about Gabbard, saying “of course it is necessary.”
“These people are clearly not qualified, and you know, they’re not prepared to run the very complex organizations that they’ve been asked to run,” Himes said.
But Himes, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said Gaetz’s qualifications should also be examined, along with the unreleased report from the House Ethics Committee.
“How come we focus on this?” » Himes said. “Matt Gaetz is not, in any respect, totally incompetent to be attorney general, and yet we’re sort of focused on this, you know, the icing on the cake of the ethics report.”
Gaetz’s resignation from Congress after Trump’s announcement came days before a scheduled meeting and vote by the House Ethics Committee on whether release a report on its investigation into Gaetz. President Mike Johnson said Friday that he “strongly request“This committee has retained the potentially damaging report.
French Hill, an Arkansas Republican who also appeared Sunday on “Face the Nation”said Johnson was making “an important point,” warning that “we do not want to set a precedent where under any circumstances we will release documents from this committee.” But he stressed that the decision rests solely with the committee, while noting that regarding Trump’s selections, the Senate will exercise its advisory and approval role through the confirmation process.
“President Trump has the prerogative to appoint the people he believes can best lead the change the American people seek in each of the agencies of the federal government,” Hill said.
The Arkansas Republican pointed out that when Trump took office in 2017, there were members of his cabinet with whom he had no personal relationship or professional experience.
“He wants to correct that this time by finding people he has a good working relationship with. He knows how they think, they know how he thinks, because he thinks that will lead to better decision-making within his administration,” Hill said.
For his part, Himes praised some of Trump’s other choices.
“I actually had a really good day when Marco Rubio was nominated for the Secretary of State, when John Ratcliffe was nominated for the CIA and when Mike Waltz was named national security adviser,” Ratcliffe said. “These are good appointments, not necessarily ones I would have made if I had been president, but these are serious people with real experience.”
He nonetheless cautioned Republicans in the Senate as the confirmation process unfolds, saying he understands “what happens to Republicans who stand up to Donald Trump” but that “history is a harsh judge.”
“History will remember the Republican senator who votes to confirm Matt Gaetz, Robert Kennedy or Tulsi Gabbard as someone who completely abdicated responsibility to Donald Trump,” Himes said.
Sue Gordon, who served as principal deputy director of national intelligence under Trump and also appeared Sunday on “Face the Nation”stressed that monitoring will be essential to the progress of the process, in a context of crisis of the New York Times report that Trump’s team could bypass the typical FBI procedure and choose instead to use a private company to vet its nominees for security clearances.
“It seems timely, but I think it will end up hurting the institution,” Gordon said, emphasizing that a private company would not have the same standards. “I know it’s not practical, but I think it’s a bad strategy and risky for America.”
Meanwhile, the Partnership for Public Service, a nonpartisan group that helps with presidential transitions, confirmed to CBS News that the Trump team did not sign documents allowing, among other things, security clearances and background checks. Gordon said she couldn’t think of a “good reason” for Team Trump to forgo transition red tape, saying “one of the great lies perpetrated against America is that our institutions are evil.” .
“You’re not protecting anyone by not signing these documents, particularly some of the candidates we have who don’t have a very deep experience base,” Gordon said. “Starting your work without any foundation, especially when institutions are begging for that foundation, just seems wrong.”