Around this time eight years ago, much of the political world marveled at the fact that Donald Trump was making Cabinet choices without bothering to scrutinize or vet any of the choices. While it’s standard for an incoming administration to review prospective nominees’ personal and financial backgrounds, including their tax returns, the then-Republican president-elect decided not to bother.
The Wall Street Journal reported at the time that Trump — who had a habit of announcing Cabinet nominees “before his transition team was ready for the announcement” — was making decisions “based on gut instinct.” He was, in other words, winging it.
Once in the White House, there was more of the same. While the then-president boasted that he and his team had “a great vetting process,” there was ample evidence to the contrary: The Republican president and his operation failed routinely to do any meaningful scrutiny at all of nominees who ended up failing due to controversies that Trump and his aides would’ve seen coming had they bothered to do their homework.
It’s against this backdrop that Trump has already announced his Cabinet choices for a second term in record time. And how, pray tell, did he manage to make these selections so quickly? As it turns out, it was easy: The president-elect and his team are once again downplaying the significance of the whole vetting process.
The Washington Post reported last week, “As his team considers hundreds of potential appointees for key jobs, he’s so far declined to let the Federal Bureau of Investigation check for potential red flags and security threats to guard against espionage — instead relying on private campaign lawyers for some appointees and doing no vetting at all for others.”
One GOP senator downplayed the significance of these tactics. NBC News reported:
Republican Sen. Bill Hagerty suggested Sunday that Americans don’t care about traditional FBI background checks for President-elect Donald Trump’s Cabinet picks as Democrats call for deeper vetting of executive branch nominees. Hagerty, R-Tenn., said Sunday that Americans “don’t care” who conducts background checks for presidential nominees when asked about the FBI’s role in conducting a background check on former Fox News host Pete Hegseth.
Appearing on ABC News’ “This Week,” the Tennessee Republican told Jonathan Karl: “I don’t think the American public cares who does the background checks.”
That might very well be true. I haven’t seen any recent public opinion research on this, but it’s quite likely that the typical American voter isn’t overly interested in prospective Cabinet nominees and their vetting process during the presidential transition process.
But I also think Hagerty is missing the point.








