"One frustration from Donald Trump's presidency was the lack of support from his Cabinet.
RINOs in Washington saddled him with people who worked for them, not him.
His first homeland security secretary opposed the wall.
This should not happen again.
The next Republican president -- be he Trump or DeSantis -- needs to bring people in from outside of Washington to run the departments.
But they cannot be so outside the system that they do not know how the system operates. Rex Tillerson ran Exxon well but he had problems running the State Department.
Republicans have plenty of people outside of Washington with the requisite experience to handle the Department of Transportation and what-not.
Right now we have 28 Republican governors.
Half of them are dogs.
After Romney, never trust a Republican governor of Massachusetts again.
The rule should be that if we didn't carry your state, you don't make the cut.
That disqualifies Glenn Youngkin.
For now.
Plus guys like Mike DeWine are weather vanes. With the hurricanes that will be coming up, they won't last.
But like I said, half the governors are what we are looking for.
Add in the Republican state treasurers, state agriculture commissioners and the rest and you have a nice pool of heartland Republicans with executive experience.
On top of that, every governor has had to balance their budgets, something no one in DC has done in more than 20 years.
None of these governors are perfect.
But if you are gonna permanently ban people like Kristi Noem for being slow on the draw on transvestites in girl's sports, then you will wind up with no one.
Remember, Trump once supported abortion.
(If you still have the equipment, you are not transgendered.)
Two members of Trump's cabinet should be considered as well.
Ric Grennell and Mike Pompeo acquitted themselves well.
They would be experienced hands.
I'd give Pompeo a second shot as secretary of state.
I mentioned non-governor state officeholders.
Definitely the next Secretary of the Treasury should come from the pool of Republican state treasurers and not Goldman Sachs.
Likewise, a state agriculture commissioner from the breadbasket of America would be a prudent choice for secretary of agriculture.
And I want a state attorney general as the next U.S. attorney general because Republican AGs right now have the Biden administration on the run.
We cannot go into 2024 without a plan for governing.
Two weeks ago, I posted, "Lawyer up, Republicans," which urged the party to have about 1,000 lawyers ready to staff DOJ and the legal staffs of the various government agencies. donsurber.blogspot.com/2022/03/lawyer…
Now I offer this.
Republicans must be prepared to govern from Day One because there is so much work to be done to rein the federal government in.
Governors and state officeholders have proven their mettle. Half failed.
Tap into the half that succeeded."
~ End ~
This is sound advice, in my opinion. One thing definitely must change, and that's staffing. ~ O #DrainTheSwamp
From Don Surber's site:
'I am a retired newspaperman. I live in Poca, WV, with my wife of 44 years, Lou Ann. I grew up in Cleveland. Three kids. Grandfather. Former Browns fan.'
Full text from the @WSJ article originally published June 12, 2014:
Perhaps it can provide a clue...
"The government and media alliance advancing the transgender cause has gone into overdrive in recent weeks.
On May 30, a U.S. Department of Health and Human Services review board ruled that Medicare can pay for the "reassignment" surgery sought by the transgendered—those who say that they don't identify with their biological sex.
Text:
"Last summer, the German publishing company Axel Springer purchased Politico.
The media guesstimated the price was $1 billion.
Who knows? Who cares what the price was?
At the time, Mathias Döpfner, CEO of Axel Springer, said, "Politico's outstanding team has disrupted digital political journalism and set new standards.
"The District of Columbia Court of Appeals ruled on Friday that the Department of Justice must release an internal memo advising then-Attorney General Bill Barr in March 2019 to determine that former President Trump did not obstruct justice.
According to the appeals court, the memo urged then-Attorney General Bill Barr after the Mueller report was delivered "to conclude that President Trump had not obstructed justice."
'Recently “presidential historian” Michael Beschloss speculated about the parameters of such an envisioned civil war.
That was a lunatic insinuation that Trump might justly suffer the same lethal fate due to supposedly mishandling of “nuclear secrets.”' amgreatness.com/2022/08/17/civ…
"As Joe Biden’s polls stagnate and the midterms approach, we are now serially treated to yet another progressive melodrama about the dangers of a supposed impending radical right-wing violent takeover.
This time the alleged threat is a Neanderthal desire for a “civil war.”
The FBI raid on Donald Trump’s Florida home, the dubious rationale for such a historic swoop, and the popular pushback at the FBI and Department of Justice from roughly half the country have further fueled these giddy “civil war” conjectures.