President Donald Trump’s habit of selecting former media personalities for top government roles hasn’t gone well, to put it mildly. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, a former weekend Fox News host, shared military secrets in a group chat that included the editor-in-chief of a national magazine — a scandal that has metastasized in recent days. And Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, a former Fox News contributor, is overseeing a Federal Aviation Administration that has laid off staff amid a raft of deadly flight incidents that the White House claims, to the dismay of the FAA staffers’ union, is unrelated to those cuts. Those are perhaps the most glaring examples.
But these fumbles don’t seem to have deterred Trump from plucking names from conservative media to place in his administration. (You can read a list of personalities Trump has plucked from Fox News alone here.) Now, we can add radio host Mark Levin and political commentator Bo Dietl to the list, as Trump announced last week that both will serve on a Department of Homeland Security advisory council. In his announcement on social media, Trump also said South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster and Florida state Sen. Joe Gruters will join the panel, which works alongside DHS Secretary Kristi Noem.
A website for the Homeland Security Advisory Council lists its duties:
- “Provides organizationally independent advice and recommendations to the Secretary, including the creation and implementation of critical and actionable policies for the security of the homeland.”
- “Conducts research and provides policy analysis and recommendations on a variety of security issues.”
- “Evaluates the impact of security related public and private policies in an attempt to formulate prospective security policies.”
Policies upon policies! “Analysis” and “independent advice” on “security policies” — sound like important stuff. And I question whether such positions are well-suited for pundits with no background in national security policy. It’s reminiscent of Trump naming a right-wing influencer like Charlie Kirk or former personal aide Walt Nauta to the boards of military academies.








