When it comes to indefensible cabinet choices, Donald Trump has flooded the zone. This almost certainly isn’t an accident: The Republican president-elect probably understands that by selecting so many unqualified and scandal-plagued extremists and throwing them at the political world all at once, it makes it far more difficult for opponents to target the more obscene nominees.
Do reality-based voices focus on Pete Hegseth’s Pentagon nomination or Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s HHS nomination? What about Trump choosing Tulsi Gabbard to serve as director of national intelligence?
The president-elect offering Mehmet Oz a powerful health care job might not get the same kind of attention, but that doesn’t make his prospective nomination any less absurd. The New York Times reported last week:
On Tuesday, President-elect Donald J. Trump announced that he would nominate Dr. Mehmet Oz, a longtime TV personality, to run the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, a powerful role that would give him control over a more than $1 trillion budget and influence over drug price negotiations, medication coverage decisions, the Affordable Care Act and more.
Oz’s last foray into politics was in the 2022 election cycle, when the Republican physician launched an ill-fated U.S. Senate campaign in Pennsylvania, which was dogged by his highly controversial record on matters related to health.
Circling back to our earlier coverage, the New York Times reported in 2021, for example, that Oz had a history of “dispensing dubious medical advice” and making “sweeping claims based on thin evidence.” The article referenced bizarre comments the television personality made about everything from weight-loss pills to apple juice to cellphones.
A group of doctors even sought his firing from Columbia University’s medical faculty in 2015, arguing that he’d “repeatedly shown disdain for science and for evidence-based medicine.”
The Washington Post had a related report during his campaign, adding that during his show’s 12-year run, Oz “provided a platform for potentially dangerous products and fringe viewpoints, aimed at millions of viewers, according to medical experts, public health organizations and federal health guidance.”








