Letters from an American - November 15, 2024
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November 15th, 2024.
Three years ago today, President Joe Biden signed into law the Infrastructure Investment
and Jobs Act, more popularly known as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act.
That law called for approximately $1.2 trillion in spending, about $550 billion newly
authorized spending on top of regular expenditures. As Biden noted today, it was the largest investment
in our nation's infrastructure in a generation. In the past three years, the Biden administration
launched more than 66,000 projects across
the country, repairing 196,000 miles of roads and 11,400 bridges, as well as replacing 367,000
lead pipes and modernizing ports and airports.
Today, the administration announced an additional $1.5 billion in funding for railroads along the Northeast Corridor,
which carries five times more passengers a day
than all the flights between Washington, DC
and New York City.
In his first term, Trump had promised a bill
to address the country's long neglected infrastructure,
but his inability to get that done
made infrastructure week a joke.
Biden got a major bill passed,
but while the administration nicknamed the law
the big deal, Biden got very little credit for it politically.
Republicans who had voted against the measure
took credit for the projects it funded,
and voters seem not to factor in the jobs
and improvements it brought
when they went to the polls last week.
This lack of credit has implications beyond the Biden administration. As economist Mark Zandi told Joel Rose of NPR, we need better infrastructure. We should continue to invest, but that's going to
be hard to do politically because lawmakers are seeing what's happening here and they're not getting credit for it. Meanwhile, President-elect Trump has been rapidly naming people he intends to nominate for his
cabinet and it's not going well. As Brian Tyler Cohen wrote on Blue Sky, the same people who've
spent the last several years decrying unqualified DEI hires are now shoehorning through cabinet nominations who can't even
pass a basic background test.
Cohen was not joking.
Evan Perez, Zachary Cohen, Holmes Librand, and Kristin Holmes of CNN reported today that
Trump's transition team is skipping background checks by the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
claiming that they are slow and intrusive.
But that lack of background checks
has already mired Trump's picks in controversy.
Trump has said he would nominate Pete Hegseth,
an Army National Guard veteran
and co-host of the weekend edition of Fox and Friends,
to become the Secretary of Defense.
Since that announcement,
news has broken that a fellow
service member, who was the unit's security guard and on an anti-terrorism team, flagged Hegseth to
their unit's leadership because one of his tattoos is used by white supremacists.
Extremist tattoos are prohibited by Army regulations.
News broke today that a woman accused Hegseth of sexually
assaulting her after a Republican conference in Monterey, California in 2017. According to Michael
Kranisch, Josh Dawsey, Jonathan O'Connell, Dan Lamothe, and John Hudson of the Washington Post,
the woman who made the allegation said the alleged victim had signed a
non-disclosure agreement with Hegseth. Now the transition team fears more
revelations. There's a lot of frustration around this, a member of the transition
team told the Washington Post reporters. He hadn't been properly vetted. Causing
even more headaches today for the transition team was Trump's appointment of former Florida
Representative Matt Gaetz to become the United States Attorney General. Immediately after Trump
said he would nominate Gaetz, the representative resigned his congressional seat, forestalling the
release of a House Ethics Committee report concerning allegations of drug use and that Gates had taken a minor across state lines for sex. It is reported that the victim, who was a
17-year-old high schooler at the time, testified before the committee. After
spending an evening with Trump at Mar-a-Lago, House Speaker Mike Johnson, a
Republican of Louisiana, said that publishing the report would be terrible and that he would strongly request that the Ethics Committee not
issue the report because that's not the way we do things in the House. This,
despite the fact that, as historian Kevin Cruz noted, for years now the right has
been accusing Democrats of running a shadowy conspiracy to protect politicians who are
sex predators. And in fact, the House Ethics Committee did release a report on Representative
William Boner, a Democrat of Tennessee, in 1987 for allegations of corruption after he had already
resigned the office to become mayor of Nashville. And then there is Trump's tapping of former Hawaii
representative Tulsi Gabbard to be director of national intelligence or DNI. Gabbard's ties to
America's adversaries, including Russia's president Vladimir Putin and Syrian president Bashar al-Assad
have raised serious questions about her loyalty. Making her the country's DNI would almost certainly collapse
ongoing US participation
in the Five Eyes Intelligence Alliance,
in which the US, the UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand
have shared intelligence since World War II.
As former Illinois representative Joe Walsh wrote,
"'Donald Trump just picked someone to oversee our intelligence who herself couldn't pass a security clearance check.
She couldn't get security clearance. She couldn't get a job in our intelligence community because she's too compromised by Russia.
Yet Trump picked her to run the whole thing.
Trump appears eager to demonstrate his control of Republicans in the Senate by ramming through appointments that will collapse the rule of law at home,
Gates, and the international rules-based order globally, Hegseth and Gabbard.
When Texas Senator John Cornyn said he would like to see the Gates report,
Trump loyalist Steve Bannon said, you either get with the program brother or you're gonna finish third in your primary. A member of Trump's transition team said that Trump
wants to bend Republican senators to his will until they snap in half. Despite the
fact that Republicans will hold a majority in the Senate when Trump takes
office, Trump's picks are so deeply flawed and dangerous that Trump and his team knew they would not get
confirmed. So they demanded that Republicans in the Senate give up their constitutional power of
advising the president on high-level appointments and consenting to his picks, the advice and consent
requirement of the Constitution.
Trump demanded that the Senate recess in order for him to push through his choices as recess
appointments.
Even the right-wing Wall Street Journal editorial board came out against this scheme, calling
it anti-constitutional and noting that it would eliminate one of the basic checks on
power that the founders built into the American system of government. Now, in order to bring
senators to heel, the Trump team is threatening to start its own super PAC
to undermine the existing Senate leadership fund, whose leaders they
insist are not loyal enough to Trump. A person close to Trump said that Senate
Republican leaders
should reflect current leadership and the future, not the past. It doesn't make
sense, one Republican operative told Politico's Natalie Allison, Ali Mutnick,
and Adam Wren. Trump just had this massive win and now they're bringing in
this never-Trump-er. But for all the spin, the political calculation for Republican senators is not as clear as
the Trump team is trying to project.
At 78, Trump is not exactly the face of the party's future.
Nor did he deliver a massive win.
He won less than 50% of the popular vote, with many voters apparently unaware of his
policies.
And while the Republicans did retake the Senate majority, they did so with very little
help, financial or otherwise, from him. Republicans will have as bad a map in
the 2026 midterm elections as the Democrats had in 2024, and Trump's voters
tend to be loyal to him and no one else, generally not turning out in midterms.
It's also possible that aside from political calculations,
enough Senate Republicans take seriously their oaths
to support and defend the Constitution of the United States,
as well as the Senate's role
in the constitutional system of checks and balances,
that they will judge Trump's antics with that in mind.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions, Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss. Thanks for watching.