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Welcome back to The Best & The Brightest. I’m Tina Nguyen.
The Trump campaign has spent months swatting down rumors about who would be staffing his potential second administration, even openly threatening to shame and exile people and projects floating their names for jobs. But it’s hard to ignore the speculation when there is so much money pouring into the coffers of the competing think tanks and other assorted entities promising to prefabricate an entire federal government for Trump, and to help fill all the top administrative roles. Of course, Trump would probably rather make the top contenders fight for it.
As always, send thoughts, tips, and hot goss my way, but this week I’ma shake it up a bit: If you’re likely to watch or attend WrestleMania this weekend—which, judging from our specific crossover readership of entertainment executives and senior Republican staffers, is not a small number—hit me up with your predictions of how that Night One tag team match will go. (If you know, you know.) I don’t have Puck hats to give out. But you will win an even greater prize: my admiration.
But first, here’s Abby Livingston with the latest from Capitol Hill, by way of Sin City…
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A MESSAGE FROM META
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| The world faces a shortage of skilled tradespeople.
Today, students at the skilled trades school RSI use the metaverse to gain hands-on welding experience and develop the exact muscle memory they need.
Making quality training more accessible helps combat a global shortage of welders.
Explore the impact of the metaverse. |
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Over at The Cook Political Report, Senate analyst Jessica Taylor caused a bit of a stir on Wednesday when she moved the Nevada Senate race, in its patented lingua franca, from Lean Democrat to Toss Up. This was clearly good news for the N.R.S.C. and its preferred candidate, veteran Sam Brown, who is taking on Democratic incumbent Jacky Rosen. “A combination of a newer electorate that Rosen must win over, Biden’s lagging numbers, and the unique post-Covid economic hangover in Nevada make this race a Toss Up,” Taylor wrote. A little more on this…
- The comps: The Toss Up rating puts Rosen’s reelection chances on the same tier as Jon Tester’s in Montana and Sherrod Brown’s in Ohio. The open-seat race to replace retiring Arizona independent Kyrsten Sinema is also a Toss Up. What separates Rosen’s race from the other two incumbents, however, is that while Biden is largely not contesting Montana and Ohio, Nevada will be at the epicenter of the Electoral College battle. There are also three Las Vegas-area House seats held by Democrats—Dina Titus, Steven Horsford, and Susie Lee—that are rated at least mildly competitive. The ad traffic jam that’s coming to Sin City is already making strategists tear their hair out over skyrocketing rates and scant inventory.
- The cash dynamic: Sam Brown officially entered the race only a few weeks ago, but he’s been raising money for months, reporting $1.7 million in cash on hand in December, compared with Rosen’s $10.6 million. Rosen’s current advantage is especially important in the television-spending context because federal candidates can secure lower ad rates than outside groups—which are sure to spend big in Nevada as well.
To be fair, though, these are ancient fundraising numbers—dating back to December 31. We will get up-to-date F.E.C. reports on April 15, the deadline for reporting first-quarter numbers.
- The Biden of it all…: Taylor also implied that the remaining senators in Lean Democratic races could see their rating shift to Toss Up if Biden’s political standing does not improve. Those senators include Pennsylvania’s Bob Casey Jr., Wisconsin’s Tammy Baldwin, and Michigan’s open race to replace retiring Democrat Debbie Stabenow.
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| Trump’s Transition Circus Heads to Palm Beach |
| As two competing D.C. factions attempt to woo Trump over the right to staff his putative government, the former president is already planning on moving his transition team to Mar-a-Lago—inciting aspiring hires to fight tooth and nail for their jobs. (Sound familiar?) |
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| The polling and prediction markets may show Joe Biden and Donald Trump in a statistical dead heat, but fortune favors the drape-measurers, and for Trump allies and hangers-on eying roles in a putative Trump II administration, the jockeying has begun. As I reported in October, there are currently two dueling conservative groups working to staff the next Trump regime: Project 2025, spearheaded by the storied Heritage Foundation, with the participation of every right-wing organization under the sun (the Tea Party Patriots, Stephen Miller’s legal firm, Moms for Liberty, etcetera); and the America First Policy Institute’s Transition Project, featuring a who’s who of Trump has-beens (Kellyanne Conway, Hogan Gidley, Larry Kudlow, Pam Bondi, etcetera etcetera). Both organizations, each obviously headquartered in Washington, D.C., are focused on vetting the next generation of Trump-aligned foot soldiers to parachute into federal agencies on Day One.
But the real action of staffing a Trump White House will be occurring closer to Trump himself. Presidential candidates typically establish transition teams in Washington, where they are separate from the campaign, and where staffers can meet and evaluate the thousands of potential employees required to run the federal government. Trump, however, plans to establish his transition directly from the comfort of Mar-a-Lago, according to three people in the know. Also unlike previous transition teams, I’m told, staffers on the committee will have direct access to Trump, too. As a result, whomever ultimately chairs the group is more likely to be a gatekeeper than a true decision-maker—though gatekeeping is a tall order given the fates of his four White House chiefs of staff. “They’ve learned nothing,” sighed a former Trump administration official, predicting more 2016-style mayhem.
Trump allies remember well the chaos of that first transition, led first by Chris Christie, then tossed to Mike Pence, and then hastily taken up by Jared Kushner when Trump actually won, surprising even members of his campaign. Infighting and division were rampant, and by the second day of his presidency, Trump had filled only 500 of the thousands of open positions. The result was a first-year revolving door of firings and defenestrations (Flynn, Comey, Dubke, Spicer, Priebus, Bannon, Scaramucci, Gorka, and a dozen others) and ineffective policy-making, too. The latter is the raison d’être of the dueling turnkey staffing outfits, both of which believe a fully vetted and prefabricated MAGA government—staffers, policy playbooks, and all—can truly effectuate the Trump vision. |
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A MESSAGE FROM META
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| “The more muscle memory that you have, the smoother your weld is.”
Shanna Ford gets high-quality welding practice with a VR training platform powered by ForgeFX. When training is more accessible, welders can practice over and over again to improve their skills and advance their careers.
Discover other stories. |
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| Alas, the potential for red-on-red chaos is such that even the presence of Johnny McEntee, considered a strong candidate for transition chair in MAGA-aligned circles, is up in the air. McEntee, the former director of the Office of Presidential Personnel under Trump, who famously gave “loyalty tests” to administration staff, is currently advising Project 2025 while working on his conservative dating app. But those close to him think he’d rather keep his distance. “I don’t think he’ll want to do it. He just wants to advise,” the former administration official told me. (Asked for comment, McEntee told me to “follow Date Right Stuff on social media and get premium on the app with my promo code.”)
Nevertheless, there’s plenty of interest in the top job, such as it is. Over the past week, I’ve heard numerous names floated for the position: AFPI’s Brooke Rollins; 2020 campaign C.O.O. Michael Glassner; even MAGA dauphin Don Jr. Another name I heard, not surprisingly, is Trump co-campaign manager Susie Wiles, who has already proven herself adept at the delicate task of professionalizing the Trump operation without overstepping or upsetting the principal. “Whoever they pick to run the transition is a good indication of where the administration is heading,” the former Trump official told me. “If it’s a more establishment person, the administration is heading in an establishment direction. But if it’s someone with no experience in government, they probably won’t be successful because they won’t know what they’re doing.”
“Any speculation about [the] transition is totally fake, coming from misinformed sources who have no idea what is going on,” a Trump campaign spokesperson told me. “Announcements will be done on our time and choosing, when we are ready. We are keeping track of those individuals who are purposefully making their names public for positions they hope to get.” |
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| Granted, there’s some truth to the notion that the third Trump campaign is a far more buttoned-up, practically leak-free enterprise compared to its previous incarnations. But it’s much easier to impose discipline on a campaign of several hundred people than it is to staff the entire federal bureaucracy. Hence the growing apprehension in some quarters that housing the transition team operations at Mar-a-Lago and having Trump micromanage it—or worse, hand it to some faction they personally dislike—could be a recipe for chaos. “You have to hire 6,000 people. That is an immense, immense undertaking,” a Trumpworld consultant told me. “You have to vet probably 15,000 people and find 6,000 people capable of running our government. And you’ve got to do it in five months.”
Previous transition efforts for George Bush, Barack Obama, and Mitt Romney were staffed and run by people who either had extensive Washington connections or experience running major operations in the private sector. (Boston Consulting Group, in fact, put together a 271-page guide for finding the right people to staff a transition.) But one person’s extensive experience is another person’s establishment swampiness, especially when the “ideal candidate” knows better than to tell Trump that a desired action would be improper, illegal, or unconstitutional. “He doesn’t want somebody who’s gonna do a completely—I hate to say it—professional job of putting together a transition,” a Republican insider put it. “He wants somebody to be closely in communication with him to basically do what he wants, day to day, all the time. And personnel-wise, he wants people whose only mantra is: Whatever the president wants, we’re gonna do.” |
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| At first blush, you’d think loyalty to Trump would be an easy bar to clear for literally anyone who’d still want to join his administration, given the events of January 6 and his seemingly infinite docket of lawsuits and trials. But it also means being loyal to his ever-changing whims, and unless the issue is one of his two highest priorities—securing the Southern border, and keeping himself out of jail—Trump could easily switch between hyper-liberal and ultra-conservative positions at the drop of the hat. There’s a scenario, for instance, where a Heritage-vetted conservative could be pushed to enforce a nationwide law enshrining the right to abortion before 15 weeks, say. Alternatively, a pro-choice Trump ally might suddenly find themselves having to defend a six-week ban.
The irony is that, for all the preparations Project 2025 and AFPI took, and for all their sniping with each other, each group is now uniquely handicapped. “Heritage ostensibly is an independent think tank,” explained the Republican insider. “They have donors and a board, and they have at least some layer of independence. They’re gonna want to be helpful to Trump. But they’re not, like, obliged to be helpful to Trump.” AFPI, on the other hand, was built by ex-Trump officials “100 percent beholden” to him, the insider said, but given how young the group is, their talent bench is thin compared to the staffers involved in Project 2025. “AFPI has a leg up in the loyalty piece,” he joked, “but in the robustness of finding some person that can handle [leading], like, the Bureau of Labor Statistics at the Department of Labor, Heritage is going to find the person.”
Right-wing ideologues with immense knowledge but diminished power clashing with malleable sycophants who can whisper in Trump’s ear but have limited policy experience—this already sounds like a disaster in the making. And then there’s the plutocratic billionaire clique wooing Trump for cabinet positions, as my partner Tara Palmeri recently reported. Those titans might be straight from central casting and make Trump look better, but they also inevitably harbor an aversion to the dowdy conservative think tankers of Washington (who, in turn, despise billionaires muscling in on their territory out of principle), and likely couldn’t staff the other 5,500-plus jobs that require intense specialization and insane hours for government-scheduled pay. (“That’s real work,” joked the insider.)
The key reason to keep the transition at Mar-a-Lago, however, has little to do with what exactly a potential appointee could bring to the administration, and more to do with weeding out people who are likely to directly contradict Trump—whether out of disobedience, self-righteousness, or self-preservation. “Trump’s overall thing that he has learned from his last go-round as president is that he’s like, ‘I don’t want people who are going to tell me no, and I don’t want people who are gonna say, ‘This is not feasible, Mr. President,’” the insider told me. “Like, ‘When I want to have a military parade in Washington, D.C., I don’t want Jim Mattis saying, “We can’t have tanks going down Constitution Avenue because it’s gonna tear up the streets and it’s just gonna be too expensive.” I don’t want that. I want yes.’” |
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| FOUR STORIES WE’RE TALKING ABOUT |
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| Gates Donor Murmurs |
| Chronicling the arrival of 24-year-old billionaire Rory Gates. |
| TEDDY SCHLEIFER |
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| McCaul to Action |
| Chatting with Rep. McCaul about his push for aid to Ukraine. |
| JULIA IOFFE |
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