Coming on the heels of announcements
regarding his picks for Attorney General, CIA director, and National Security
Adviser (my analysis of these picks can be found here and here), Trump
announced just before Thanksgiving that Nikki Haley would serve as UN ambassador—a post that would be considered Cabinet level in the
Trump administration—while Betsy DeVos, a school choice and charter-school
activist and former head of the Michigan Republican Party, would be Secretary of Education.
In short, I’m enthusiastic about both.
Nikki Haley in particular, after two terms as governor of South Carolina, needs
almost no introduction to conservatives across the country (although her Wikipedia page offers a good overview, if
necessary). She’s been considered a rising star in the party for years, ever
since her initial gubernatorial victory in 2010, and her criticisms of Trump
throughout the campaign make it clear that she’s no blind Trump loyalist, one
of the few solid arguments against the nominations of people like Jeff
Sessions.
As a governor and former state
legislator, she has little in the way of extensive foreign policy experience,
something Senate Democrats will undoubtedly use against her come confirmation
time. But she has led several important trade missions, has extensive knowledge
of foreign policy concerns, and has proven herself to be both a quick study and
a strong-willed individual who will stand up against America’s enemies at the
United Nations—and is extremely likeable to boot. She should be easily
confirmed.
DeVos I was unfamiliar with before word
started leaking several days ago that Trump was considering her for Education
Secretary, but as the reports on her nomination make clear, she has been a strong
proponent for charter schools and school choice measures for years. About the
only valid argument against her nomination from the Right is her past support
for Common Core—although she has also declared that she now opposes it, and for now all we can do is wait to see what, if
anything, new comes up in confirmation hearings to prove that isn’t so.
The other open question about DeVos is
how committed she will be to ending the federal Department of Education, a long-held
conservative dream that Trump occasionally spoke about on the campaign trail,
but on which he has been silent since the election. That, presumably, is
something else that will come up during her confirmation hearing if not before.
In the meantime, the other points on her resume look strong, and prominent
#NeverTrumper Bill Kristol didn’t hesitate to praise her
selection.
Don’t get me wrong—Trump has said
several things since the election to make me proud I voted for Evan McMullin,
most recently his softening on climate change and the Paris climate agreement
at a meeting with the New York Times.
But as troubling as those statements are, they are, as of yet, only words. The
only concrete actions Trump has yet taken have been his Cabinet choices, and so
far they have been almost uniformly stellar.
He proved two weeks ago he didn’t need
my vote to win, but it seems like he’s working hard to earn it for 2020.
No comments:
Post a Comment