Former EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt’s career was ultimately derailed by an avalanche of corruption allegations, but there was a related problem that was too often overlooked: the far-right EPA chief was careless in pursuit of his own goals.
The New York Times reported in April that Pruitt was in such a rush to gut environmental protections, he ended up undermining his efforts with sloppy, politically motivated work. Richard Lazarus, a professor of environmental law at Harvard, told the Times, “In their rush to get things done, [Pruitt and his team are] failing to dot their i’s and cross their t’s. And they’re starting to stumble over a lot of trip wires. They’re producing a lot of short, poorly crafted rulemakings that are not likely to hold up in court.”
Similarly, Attorney General Jeff Sessions is likely to leave his post fairly soon because Donald Trump believes he’s done too little to shield the White House and Republicans from federal law enforcement. But like Pruitt, Sessions is also burdened by questions about his competence. The New York Times reported today:
During his 20 months in office, Attorney General Jeff Sessions has swept in perhaps the most dramatic political shift in memory at the Justice Department, from the civil rights-centered agenda of the Obama era to one that favors his hard-line conservative views on immigration, civil rights and social issues.
Now, discontent and infighting have taken hold at the Justice Department, in part because Mr. Sessions was so determined to carry out that transformation that he ignored dissent, at times putting the Trump administration on track to lose in court and prompting high-level departures, according to interviews over several months with two dozen current and former career department lawyers who worked under Mr. Sessions.
Reading the article, my first instinct was that it was part of a campaign to help justify Sessions’ ouster: the president doesn’t trust the attorney general, so Trump loyalists told the New York Times that Sessions is incompetent.
And while there may be something to that, the truth of the matter is, the questions about Sessions’ competence are rooted in fact.
Consider a specific example:









