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https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/20/opinion/donald-the-unready.html?rref=collection%2Fcolumn%2Fpaul-krugman&action=click&contentCollection=opinion®ion=stream&module=stream_unit&version=latest&contentPlacement=1&pgtype=collection
Betsy DeVos,
whom Donald Trump has nominated as education secretary, doesn’t know
basic education terms, doesn’t know about federal statutes governing
special education, but thinks school officials should carry guns to
defend against grizzly bears.
Monica Crowley,
selected as deputy national security adviser, withdrew after it was
revealed that much of her past writing was plagiarized. Many other
national security positions remain unfilled, and it’s unclear how much
if any of the briefing materials prepared by the outgoing administration
have even been read.
Meanwhile Rex Tillerson,
selected as secretary of state, casually declared that America would
block Chinese access to bases in the South China Sea, apparently unaware
that he was in effect threatening to go to war if China called his
bluff.
Do you see a pattern here?
It
was obvious to anyone paying attention that the incoming administration
would be blatantly corrupt. But would it at least be efficient in its
corruption?
Many
Trump voters certainly thought they were choosing a smart businessman
who would get things done. And even those who knew better may have hoped
that the president-elect, his ego finally sated, would settle down to
running the country — or at least delegate the boring business of
governing America to people actually capable of doing the job.
But
it’s not happening. Mr. Trump hasn’t pivoted, matured, whatever term
you prefer. He’s still the insecure, short-attention-span egomaniac he
always was. Worse, he is surrounding himself with people who share many
of his flaws — perhaps because they’re the sort of people with whom he
is comfortable.
So
the typical Trump nominee, in everything from economics to diplomacy to
national security, is ethically challenged, ignorant about the area of
policy he or she is supposed to manage and deeply incurious. Some, like Michael Flynn,
Mr. Trump’s choice as national security adviser, are even as addicted
as their boss to internet conspiracy theories. This isn’t a team that
will compensate for the commander in chief’s weaknesses; on the
contrary, it’s a team that will amplify them.
Why
does this matter? If you want a model for how the Trump-Putin
administration is likely to function (or malfunction), it’s helpful to
recall what happened during the Bush-Cheney years.
People
tend to forget the extent to which the last Republican administration
was also characterized by cronyism, the appointment of unqualified but
well-connected people to key positions. It wasn’t as extreme as what
we’re seeing now, but it was striking at the time. Remember “Brownie, you’re doing a heck of a job”? And it caused very real damage.
In
particular, if you want some notion of what Trump governance is likely
to look like, consider the botched occupation of Iraq. People who knew
anything about nation-building weren’t wanted; party loyalists — and
corporate profiteers — took their place. There’s even a little-known
connection: Betsy DeVos’s brother, Erik Prince,
founded Blackwater, the mercenary outfit that, among other things,
helped destabilize Iraq by firing into a crowd of civilians.
Now
the conditions that prevailed in Iraq — blind ideology, contempt for
expertise, effective absence of any enforcement of ethics rules — have
come to America, but in a far more acute form.
And
what will happen when we face a crisis? Remember, Katrina was the event
that finally revealed the costs of Bush-era cronyism to all.
Crises
of some kind are bound to occur on any president’s watch. They appear
especially likely given the crew that’s coming in and their allies in
Congress: Given the stated priorities of the people about to take
charge, we could very well see collapsing health care, a trade war and a
military standoff with China just in the next year.
But
even if we somehow skirt those dangers, stuff always happens. Maybe
there will be a new economic crisis, helped along by the rush to undo
financial regulation. Maybe there will be a foreign affairs crisis, say
over adventurism in the Baltics by Mr. Trump’s good friend Vladimir.
Maybe it will be something we’re not thinking about. Then what?
Real
crises need real solutions. They can’t be resolved with a killer tweet,
or by having your friends in the F.B.I. or the Kremlin feed the media
stories that take your problems off the front page. What the situation
demands are knowledgeable, levelheaded people in positions of authority.
But
as far as we know, almost no people meeting that description will be in
the new administration, except possibly the nominee for defense
secretary — whose nickname just happens to be “Mad Dog.”
So
there you have it: an administration unprecedented in its corruption,
but also completely unprepared to govern. It’s going to be terrific, let
me tell you.
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