| ◼ Matt Gaetz needs 51 votes, but he can’t even count past 17.
◼ President-elect Trump nominated his prominent toady, Representative Matt Gaetz (R., Fla.), to be his attorney general. Gaetz resigned from the House, apparently to force the shutdown of an ethics investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct, illicit drug use, obstruction, and other unsavory conduct. We understand Trump’s instincts here. During his first term, his own Department of Justice failed to rein in Obama-era holdovers, mainly at the FBI, who publicly intimated that he was a clandestine agent of Russia based on bogus evidence supplied by Trump’s political opponents. Then, his successor’s administration indicted him twice. Trump is thus highly resentful and suspicious of politicized law enforcement. But he should have no trouble finding a skilled lawyer who is appropriately loyal and scrupulously lawful. Matt Gaetz is not that lawyer. Fresh out of law school, he worked briefly at a small Florida firm before diving into electoral politics. That would not necessarily be disqualifying if Gaetz had exhibited high levels of legal acumen and judgment during his 14 years in legislatures. He has not. He was a principal supporter of Trump’s disgraceful scheme to reverse his loss to President Biden. After January 6, 2021, Gaetz peddled conspiracy theories that the Capitol riot had been covertly led by left-wing radicals rather than Trump supporters. When that didn’t fly, he decided that the violence, in which scores of police were injured, might have been an inside job orchestrated by the FBI. His most famous antic was the reckless, vengeful motion to oust then-speaker Kevin McCarthy from his post, plunging the House into weeks of chaos. Gaetz should withdraw if he truly wants to avoid an intense public examination of the subject matter of the ethics investigation. Otherwise, the Senate must do its constitutional duty and deny consent to an unworthy nominee.
◼ Trump also tapped Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to be secretary of health and human services. A lot of attention focuses on his opposition to vaccines and other oddball stances. But do not lose sight of the fact that HHS is a vast bureaucracy that controls more than one-fourth of the federal budget, through its running of Medicare, Medicaid, and Obamacare (which gave sweeping regulatory powers to the secretary). The position would also give him control over the FDA, CDC, and NIH. It is through HHS that Republican presidents influence abortion policy, but RFK Jr. earlier this year defended the right to “full-term abortion.” After backtracking, he still said he supported abortion until “viability.” HHS would also be the agency through which Republicans could try to loosen Obamacare regulations, but in Kennedy, Trump has named somebody who is in favor of single-payer health care. Again: The Constitution gives the Senate its “advice and consent” role for a reason.
◼ After Democrats’ thoroughly dispiriting Election Day, Representative Seth Moulton (D., Mass.) said: “I have two little girls, I don’t want them getting run over on a playing field by a male or formerly male athlete, but as a Democrat I’m supposed to be afraid to say that.” The backlash from Moulton’s fellow Democrats came fast and furious. Massachusetts governor Maura Healey accused Moulton of playing “politics with people, particularly young people and folks who are vulnerable.” In Moulton’s hometown of Salem, Mayor Dominick Pangallo and the school committee jointly said Moulton’s comments “do not reflect our values.” Salem city councilman Kyle Davis demanded Moulton’s resignation. Moulton stuck to his guns. “Sadly, too many fellow Democrats feel like there isn’t a place within our party for them to say certain things out loud — even when it’s a reasonable, majority opinion in our country.”
◼ Republicans elected Senator John Thune of South Dakota, who began his Senate career in 2004 by unseating majority leader Tom Daschle, as their next majority leader. It was no great surprise. Trump allies in media and Congress promoted Rick Scott as a supposed anti-establishment alternative and a break from the stewardship of Senator Mitch McConnell, but Scott was eliminated after winning only 13 votes on the first ballot. Thune then edged out Senator John Cornyn, 29–24. Thune will have some big shoes to fill after McConnell’s run as leader. He has promised a more open process than McConnell ran. In remarks after his victory, Thune emphasized the need to support Trump agenda items such as economic deregulation, achieving “energy dominance,” and providing the tools necessary to secure the border. Reassuringly to those of us who believe in the constitutional primacy of the legislative branch, Thune emphasized the Senate’s role as an independent body. He said there would not be any changes to filibuster rules and did not embrace a blank-check approach to nominations via recess appointments. The scale of his challenge in bridging the gulf between his conference and Trump was dramatized by the nomination of Matt Gaetz as attorney general just hours after the vote, a choice that should provoke Republican defections. We wish him the best.
◼ Democrats passed the so-called Inflation Reduction Act through budget reconciliation, without a single Republican vote. Republicans can repeal it without a single Democratic vote, also through budget reconciliation. And they should. The law expanded the IRS, implemented drug price controls that have slowed innovation, raised prices and reduced options for Medicare Part D, and created an entire new subsector of the economy based on government handouts for green energy. Democrats passed it based on lies: first, that its title was its purpose, and second, that it would reduce the deficit. It never had anything to do with inflation, and the Biden administration has interpreted parts of the law so that it will cost more than three times what Democrats promised when it was passed. Because most of the IRA money hasn’t gone out yet, repealing it now will allow Republicans to rack up “savings” for budget-scoring purposes without actually having to take stuff away from people—baby steps!—and it will prevent a bevy of future Solyndras. Think of it as a Biden Legacy Reduction Act. |