The last I saw of Mick Mulvaney, the Republican was featured in a commercial. Was it an ad for a candidate? Maybe a super PAC? No, as it turned out, Mulvaney was in a commercial for a tech company that sells antivirus software.
Mulvaney wasn’t even the star of the commercial. The ad featured dozens of apparent company employees, before adding Mulvaney, who was on screen for only a couple of seconds, toward the end.
Three months later, he appears to have landed an even better gig. My MSNBC colleague Hayes Brown explained:
CBS News announced Tuesday that it had hired Mick Mulvaney…. After the announcement of Mulvaney’s new role as an on-air contributor who will provide “political analysis across the network’s broadcasts and platforms,” Mulvaney immediately appeared on CBS News’ MoneyWatch segment, where he commented on President Joe Biden’s latest budget proposal and, not surprisingly, found it problematic.
Hayes added, “One can only assume that the CBS newsroom leadership has suffered a mass amnesia event.” If so, let’s refresh their memories.
At face value, Mulvaney might appear to be a qualified and experienced voice. After all, Mulvaney was a multi-term member of Congress before Donald Trump tapped the Republican for a variety of jobs, including head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, director of the Office of Management and Budget, White House chief of staff, and U.S. Special Envoy for Northern Ireland.
At a superficial level, someone might see a c.v. like that and assume that Mulvaney could speak with authority and expertise about a wide range of governmental issues.
But that’s why it’s all the more important to look below the surface.
As we discussed several years ago, one of the amazing things about Mulvaney is that he’s mastered the fine art of falling up.
In the not-too-distant past, the South Carolina Republican was a fairly obscure right-wing congressman best known for championing government shutdowns, debt-ceiling crises, and pointless votes to repeal the Affordable Care Act. As recently as 2016, he even accepted a speaking invitation from the John Birch Society.
Congress has always had fringe members, and during his ineffective tenure on Capitol Hill, Mulvaney was not taken especially seriously as a lawmaker.
But Trump saw this as a record worthy of a promotion, elevating Mulvaney to lead OMB, where he peddled conspiracy theories, was at times disconnected from the then-president’s position on budget issues, and where he gave the banking industry some rather crude advice on how best to exploit Capitol Hill corruption.
During Mulvaney’s tenure as budget director, the nation’s finances also took a turn toward the absurd: By some measures, the United States never had a budget deficit that high during a period of strong economic growth. He also unveiled a budget plan with a jaw-dropping $2-trillion mistake — and then insisted his colossal screw-up was intentional.








