Dysfunction, incompetence, and inconsistent.
The President had a good week.
He has gotten his Supreme court nominee onto the court, at
great cost to the republic, but he got it done. The sacrificing of the filibuster,
a long-held tradition of the United States Senate, and any hope of a less polarized
congress was the casualty. He doesn’t care too much. That has been his
dysfunction, he doesn’t care about much.
On Monday, he said he didn’t care about whether Assad stayed
in power in Syria or not, Friday he wages war against Assad and possibly
Russia. We could call it inconsistent, you might give him a pass on that since
I might have changed my mind considering the atrocity unleashed by Assad, but I
wonder if he thought the whole thing through. It doesn’t look like it.
The real inconsistency is his work on his health care plan,
he said “everyone covered for less money, go to any doctor you want,” to
negotiating with the “Freedom” caucus to take away health insurance from
possibly more people than had gained it under the Affordable Care Act, with the
likelihood of higher premiums with less coverage. All he wants is a win.
As of today, of the 553 key positions that must be approved
by the Senate Trump has only nominated 24. There are 28 more who have been
announced but not yet sent to the Senate for approval. This is only part of the
1200 positions that require Senate approval. There are another 3800 or so total
political appointees that have not been sourced. The reason for this is some
kind of loyalty test that many potential candidates have failed. What about
qualifications for the job? Is he willing to substitute competence for loyalty?
Just that he hasn’t made the appointments is incompetent.
With the failure of their health care bill and any compromise
on the horizon. Any tax bill looks to be just another fight among the Republicans,
I don’t hold out much hope that the Republicans will be able to govern at all
for the next 2 years. They’ll get some small things done. Repeal any climate
saving rules for the oil and coal industries that were imposed by President
Obama, make some rich people richer by making it easier for banksters to siphon
off money from our retirement accounts. But they won’t be able to pull off the
big transfer of power and wealth to the already obscenely rich and obscurely powerful.
I feel that If Mr. Trump survives his first term, and we
have not had a nuclear event, a major war, or a financial meltdown, I am
expecting one or more of these. I will consider his presidency a success. The
United States will have dodged a bullet.
The best part for me, of this dumpster fire of an
administration, is that we may never again have to hear “why don’t we let a business
man run the government” Clearly that is a bad idea.