Trump’s return to the White House: his cabinet choices so far
Donald Trump, fresh off an election win earlier this month that capped a stunning comeback, is quickly announcing plans for an emboldened new administration.
Trump’s first term as president between 2017 and 2021 was marked by heavy turnover, and he made strategic use at times of having people serve in an acting capacity in cabinet-level positions for several months.
Cabinet positions, along with several other administration roles, generally require Senate approval. In a social media post on Nov. 10, Trump said anyone seeking to be Republican majority leader must agree not to stand in the way of temporary presidential appointments.
So-called recess appointments are a practice generally shunned since a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 2014, and are meant to be used when the chamber has a legitimate break. At least one constitutional expert has expressed concern that Trump could be looking to circumvent challenging confirmation hearings on contentious nominees.
In addition to his cabinet choices, the fate of FBI director Christopher Wray will also be closely watched. Wray, a Republican, was appointed by Trump but has been criticized by the former president given the role of FBI agents in helping investigate cases that led to criminal indictments he faced.
Doug Collins, veterans affairs secretary
Collins, a former congressman from Georgia, is the president-elect’s choice to run the Department of Veterans Affairs.
“We must take care of our brave men and women in uniform,” Trump said in a statement Thursday.
Collins, 58, is a chaplain in the U.S. air force reserve command. The Republican served in Congress from 2013 to 2021 and helped defend Trump during his first impeachment process.
Tulsi Gabbard, director of national intelligence
Trump said on Wednesday that he had chosen Tulsi Gabbard, a 43-year-old former Democratic representative and critic of the Biden administration, as his director of national intelligence.
Gabbard, who left the Democratic party in 2022 to become an independent and was considered a possible candidate to become Trump’s running mate, would take over from Avril Haines as the top official in the U.S. intelligence community after the Republican president-elect starts his second term in January.
She is not expected to face difficulty being confirmed in the Senate, where Trump’s fellow Republicans will hold a majority of seats starting early next year.
“I know Tulsi will bring the fearless spirit that has defined her illustrious career to our intelligence community, championing our constitutional rights and securing peace through strength,” Trump said in a statement.
Gabbard has little direct experience with intelligence work and had not been widely expected to be tapped for the post.
She was deployed in Iraq from 2004 to 2005 as a major in the Hawaii National Guard and is now a lieutenant-colonel in the U.S. Army Reserves.
Matt Gaetz, attorney general
Trump on Wednesday named firebrand Republican U.S. Representative Matt Gaetz to be his nominee for attorney general.
Trump announced the decision in a post on his Truth Social network, saying that “Matt will end Weaponized Government, protect our Borders, dismantle Criminal Organizations and restore Americans’ badly-shattered Faith and Confidence in the Justice Department.”
Gaetz, 42, represents much of the Florida Panhandle and became a conservative star when he joined Congress, appearing as a frequent staunch defender of Trump on cable news.
He irked fellow Republican members in early 2023 when he filed the resolution that successfully ousted former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy. McCarthy then helped fund a primary challenge to Gaetz that included commercials alleging that he paid for sex with a 17-year-old, an allegation currently being investigated by the House ethics committee. Gaetz has denied any wrongdoing. The Justice Department ended its own sex-trafficking investigation without bringing charges against him.
Even Trump’s allies in the Senate are keeping their distance from Gaetz.
“We’ll see,” Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin said when asked whether he would vote to confirm the congressman.
Sen. John Cornyn, a Texas Republican, suggested that the Senate would look closely into Gaetz, including the House ethics committee investigation.
“I’m sure it will make for a popcorn-eating confirmation hearing,” said Republican Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina.
Pete Hegseth, secretary of defence
Trump’s announcement of his intention to nominate Hegseth, a 44-year-old Fox News anchor, to lead the Pentagon seemed to catch even some Republican legislators off guard, with reactions on Capitol Hill ranging from “wow” to “who?” to “interesting.”
After graduating from Princeton University in 2003, Hegseth was commissioned as an infantry captain in the Army National Guard, serving overseas in Afghanistan and Iraq as well as at Guantanamo Bay. He then lobbied on behalf of Eddie Gallagher and Mathew Golsteyn, military members accused of war crimes, leading to an unprecedented intervention by a U.S. president as military tribunals were examining the allegations.
Hegseth, who has complained about “woke” diversity initiatives within the military and questioned women having combat roles, has never led a large organization, let alone one with an estimated 24,000 employees as the Pentagon. The next defence secretary confronts a tumultuous geopolitical situation that includes an emboldened North Korea, Russia’s war on Ukraine and Israel’s war with Hamas and Hezbollah, which has exacerbated already poor relations between Israel and Iran.
“I lead the Senate military personnel panel. All three of my brothers served in uniform. I respect every one of our service members,” Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren said in a social media post on Tuesday. “Donald Trump’s pick will make us less safe and must be rejected.”
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., health and human services secretary
Kennedy made a presidential run as an Independent candidate in 2024, eventually suspending it and throwing his support to Trump. That has culminated in Trump announcing that he’ll make Kennedy his pick for health and human services secretary.
If Kennedy, a lawyer and anti-vaccine activist, ends up taking on that role, he’ll take charge of a massive agency that oversees everything from drug, vaccine and food safety to medical research and the social safety net programs Medicare and Medicaid.
The 70-year-old Kennedy is the son of the late U.S. senator Robert Kennedy. He’s also the nephew of the late president John F. Kennedy. Both his father and his uncle died in separate assassinations in the 1960s.
Kristi Noem, homeland security secretary
Noem grew up on a farm and interned on Capitol Hill, before serving in both U.S. and state legislatures. She was elected governor in 2019, but a memoir released this year of her life and career was criticized both for factually dubious anecdotes and her description of shooting dead a misbehaving dog.
South Dakota has one of the lowest percentages of foreign-born citizens of any state, but Noem, 52, has made asylum and irregular immigration from the southern border a preoccupation. She sent state National Guard troops for Texas’s controversial Operation Lone Star.
Noem has claimed that drugs are flooding her state due to a porous border, though federal government statistics indicate the vast majority comes through points of entry, not between them. Reporting to her could be Tom Homan, a Trump pick to lead Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Homan has spoken enthusiastically about large-scale deportations of those in the country without legal status.
John Ratcliffe, CIA director
Ratcliffe, a 59-year-old U.S. attorney in the George W. Bush administration serving the Eastern District of Texas, was a congressman from the state for five years. Once rejected as a nominee for director of national intelligence in 2019 after bipartisan Senate criticism over his lack of experience and some questionable claims on his resumé, he was confirmed by the chamber several months later.
He faced criticism just weeks before election day in 2020 for declassifying Russian intelligence alleging damaging information about Democrats while acknowledging that it was unverified. While Democrats decried the move as a partisan stunt that politicized intelligence, even former Trump defence secretary Mark Esper suggested in his 2022 book A Sacred Oath that it was inappropriate.
Marco Rubio, U.S. secretary of state
Trump said Wednesday that he would nominate Rubio, a veteran Republican senator from Florida, to be his pick for U.S. secretary of state.
The 53-year-old Rubio supported Trump during his presidential run, and reportedly had been in the running to be the president-elect’s running mate. The two men had a more adversarial relationship in the past.
The conservative lawmaker is a noted hawk on China, Cuba and Iran.
On Capitol Hill, Rubio is the vice-chairman of the Senate intelligence committee and a member of the Senate foreign relations committee.
Elise Stefanik, ambassador to United Nations
Stefanik, a Republican House member since 2014, appeared skeptical of Trump initially but over time became one of his most vociferous supporters. She was among many Republicans who objected to the certification of Joe Biden’s 2020 election win; she is also one of very few who have mimicked Trump’s description of defendants charged and sentenced in the 2021 Capitol riot as “hostages,” seeming to indicate they were political prisoners.
Stefanik, 40, saw her profile rise after the Israel-Hamas war for her aggressive questioning of American university presidents over antisemitism on their campuses. She has gone as far as calling last month for a “complete reassessment” of U.S. funding for the United Nations, and could be viewed with suspicion at the UN by some countries in the Middle East after helping push for the blocking of American support for United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA).
Lee Zeldin, environmental protection agency administrator
Zeldin, 44, who ran for governor of New York in 2022, previously served eight years in the House of Representatives and was among the Republicans in Congress who voted against certifying the 2020 election results. He did not serve on any House committees with oversight of environmental policy and had a low lifetime score of 14 per cent from advocacy group the League of Conservation Voters during his eight years in Congress.
Trump is in favour of boosting production of fossil fuels such as oil, natural gas and coal, the main causes of climate change. He has vowed to end subsidies for wind power that were included in legislation signed by U.S. President Joe Biden two years ago.
In his first turn as president, Trump rolled back more than 100 environmental laws and regulations.
Chris Wright, energy secretary
CEO of Denver-based Liberty Energy, Wright is a vocal advocate of oil and gas development, including fracking, a key pillar of Trump’s quest to achieve U.S. “energy dominance” in the global market.
Wright has been one of the industry’s loudest voices against efforts to fight climate change and could give fossil fuels a boost, including quick action to end a year-long pause on natural gas export approvals by the Biden administration.
He has criticized what he calls a “top-down” approach to climate by liberal and left-wing groups and said the climate movement around the world is “collapsing under its own weight.”
Published at Fri, 01 Nov 2024 08:11:21 +0000
Trump victory a boon to Israeli settlers who hope to annex West Bank
Supporters of Israel’s decades-old settlement enterprise in the occupied Palestinian territories have been quick to welcome Donald Trump’s recent U.S. election victory and what they clearly expect will be a boon to their aim of formally annexing the West Bank.
Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, himself a settler, was confident enough to put a date on the aspiration during a Monday news conference in Jerusalem.
“The year 2025 will, with God’s help, be the year of sovereignty in Judea and Samaria,” he said, using the Jewish biblical name for the West Bank.
Smotrich added he intends to work with “the new administration of President Trump, and with the international community” toward that goal.
For Palestinians still clinging to hope that the occupied territories including East Jerusalem will one day form the basis for a Palestinian state, it’s one more thing to worry about on an already bleak horizon.
Dror Etkes, an Israeli researcher and anti-settlement activist, said the Palestinians are right to worry, given the rate of settlement expansion during Trump’s first presidency along with the makeup of the current Israeli government.
Elected two years ago, the government is the most right-wing in Israel’s history and includes extremist settlers in its cabinet.
“They’re going to annex a very, very big part of the West Bank, I assume,” said Etkes. “Where [Israeli settlements] are today and where they want Israelis to be in the future.”
Israel captured East Jerusalem and the West Bank from Jordan in 1967. Successive Israeli governments since have allowed Jewish settlements to expand and flourish on Palestinian land.
The settlements are widely considered illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this.
Today, there are a half-million Jewish settlers in the West Bank alone, some living in large settlement blocs, others in smaller remote ones or in “outposts.” Some settlers live there for economic reasons, others because they believe they have a divine right to the land.
Violence against Palestinians by extremist settlers has been on the rise in recent years, spiking even more in the wake of the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel.
“Vicious. This is the word,” said Etkes, describing what he calls a well-organized, well-funded campaign aimed in particular at Palestinian herding communities.
“Targeting one community after the other. And once you are getting rid of one community, you go to the next one. And to the next.”
There have been more than 1,400 attacks, many of them increasingly violent, by Israeli settlers against Palestinians over the past year, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
Mohammad Hureini, a 20-year-old Palestinian activist in the village of At-Tuwani tries to ensure his father is never alone when out grazing their animals, he told CBC in a September interview at his family home.
“I’ve been really afraid to face settlers over the past period,” he said. “People are becoming more and more crazy.”
At-Tuwani lies south of Hebron and in the shadow of Ma’on, a settlement notorious for the extremists who live there and in a nearby outpost.
For nearly two decades, Palestinian children have had an Israeli army escort while on their way to school.
Hureini said At-Tuwani residents face near-daily harassment. “It became a crime if you water your trees. If you work your land,” he said.
He said his father is accompanied by himself, one of his brothers, or Israeli and international “solidarity” volunteers when he’s with his herd or tending to their land.
Hureini’s cousin was shot in the stomach by a settler just days after violence began in October 2023. Video of the incident shows an armed settler opening fire and his cousin falling to the ground, while an armed figure in military fatigues looks on.
Zakaria Adra survived, but his attacker was never charged. It’s not clear if the man in army fatigues was a soldier or not.
That’s a growing problem in the West Bank, according to observers who say it’s hard to differentiate between the Israel Defence Forces and what it called “local community defence forces,” which the IDF trains and equips.
Local defence force numbers have swelled since October 2023. These are often made up of hardline settlers who have volunteered as reservists to replace Israeli troops normally stationed in the West Bank but are now fighting in Gaza or Lebanon.
Critics call them militias.
Who is a soldier, who is a settler?
Hagit Ofran, settlement watch director for the Israeli organization Peace Now, said the blurred line is extremely problematic.
“With the way that settlers and soldiers are working together, and the fact that you cannot know if the person in front of you is a settler who is now on reserve duty and a soldier, or a settler who happened to have the uniform in his closet and is now wearing [it].”
CBC News journalists experienced the phenomenon first-hand while filming an interview with Hureini outside his family home in September.
An armed man dressed in military fatigues but with no recognizable insignia approached from the direction of the settlement outpost in a buggy-like vehicle, from which he emerged to demand our passports.
He refused to present identification or to accept our Israeli government-issued press cards in place of our passports. Soon, more armed men in military dress arrived.
Hureini surrendered his ID, and told us he knew the “settler-soldier” as someone who regularly harassed At-Tuwani residents.
A standoff ensued during which a Palestinian-Israeli colleague working with us was detained by the armed men and taken away in a vehicle.
After having been driven off in the direction of the settlement, he was eventually released on the side of a road where our crew was able to collect him. He’d been ordered to report to a police station the next day and forbidden from returning to the area for two weeks.
It was a mild taste of what many Palestinians are faced with every day.
Asked to comment on the incident, the IDF said the man demanding passports was an army reservist and was entitled to do so.
“The intensity of the harassment, and the distance that the army is keeping the Palestinians away from their lands became much bigger because of this new phenomenon of [the] regional defence units,” said Peace Now’s Ofran.
She said hundreds of Palestinian families have fled settler violence over the past year.
‘You’re always afraid’
Residents of Zanuta, a herding village south of At-Tuwani, fled en masse in October 2023. This summer, an order from Israel’s Supreme Court gave them permission to return.
But when they tried to move back in September, they found their homes had been destroyed along with the local council building and a school built with funding from the European Union.
The Israeli court order stated that they be given army and police protection, but residents say they didn’t get it.
“You’re always afraid,” 52-year-old shepherd Shafik Suleiman told us in September, saying the settlers had come back to harass them right away. “If you’d come an hour ago you would have seen settlers here.”
He showed us a video of a man driving his quad vehicle through their animals. He said the man was Yinon Levi, head of an outpost called the Meitarim farm located just across the valley from Zanuta.
Levi is one of 11 extremist settlers sanctioned by Canada, accused of inciting and perpetrating violence against Palestinians and their property.
Outposts are small settlements usually consisting of one or two structures or even tents. They are used by hard-liners as a base from which to extend control over more land.
Even Israel considers the outposts illegal — at least technically.
Palestinians and settlement watch groups say despite its own laws, the current Israeli government broadly supports them and will one day connect them to infrastructure including electricity and water.
Nearly 70 outposts have been green-lit for government funding over the past year according to settlement watch groups, a way of “regularizing” them. Meanwhile, 43 new outposts have been established.
In the end, the residents of Zanuta abandoned their attempt to repopulate their town. Even with the court order allowing them to return, they were not given permission to rebuild damaged buildings.
Coupled with ongoing threats from Meitarim farm, Zanuta’s mayor said it was no longer sustainable.
“Unfortunately, the settlers still attack us,” said Fayez Tell, adding the Oct. 7 attacks and the Gaza war that followed have given cover to Israelis determined to annex the West Bank.
“The settlers have … permission to do anything,” he said.
Back in At-Tuwani, Hureini says his chosen path remains one of activism, non-violent resistance to the theft of Palestinian land.
“Even though I’m still under the same, you know, rule as a man carrying a gun,” he said. “Because this occupation doesn’t [care] if you are having a gun or not. You are the same target.
“We have no power in our hand except to just be in the land, on the ground and let them see that we still will not go out from here.”
Published at Sat, 16 Nov 2024 09:00:00 +0000