Two weeks after the presidential election, things are moving
forward for President-Elect Donald Trump, who is busy selecting individuals for
administration posts.
Last week, Trump’s first two appointments were Republican
National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus as chief of staff and former head of
Breitbart News, Stephen Bannon, as chief strategist.
Amid assessments of the transition’s first few days as
chaotic and on the cusp of failure, Bannon’s choice drew sharp criticism from
the leftist Trump opponents and the major media, who are determined to
criticize most everything Trump’s team does or says.
Next came the choice of retired Lt. Gen. Michael T. Flynn as
national security adviser, Rep. Mike Pompeo (R-Kan.) as director of the CIA,
and Sen. Jeff Sessions, (R-Ala.) for Attorney General, subject to Senate
approval, and meetings Saturday with 2012 Republican presidential candidate
Mitt Romney, thought to be a candidate for secretary of state, and with
retired Marine Corps Gen. James Mattis, who is said to be a potential contender
for defense secretary.
Meetings with potential selectees continued through the
weekend, stoking the fires of speculation about who might go where and, of course,
the predictable Democrat opposition’s criticism of people under consideration,
as well as those already chosen.
As bad a choice as media and political enemies believe Trump
to be, so far his transition is right on schedule.
Saturday, Trump took action to remove what likely would have
become a big distraction to organizing his administration, doing so prior to
being sworn in, and which likely would have continued at least into the early
months of his presidency. Agreeing to a settlement of $25 million, three lawsuits
aimed at Trump University have been resolved. The agreement also includes $1
million in penalties to the state of New York.
Former students of the school claimed that they paid
thousands of dollars to learn Trump’s real estate success secrets, but contended
that they were lured into paying up to $35,000 to learn from instructors
hand-picked by Trump, which they claim did not happen.
The settlement was negotiated between Trump’s lawyers and
New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and the law firm that brought the suit
against the now closed school. The settlement does not require an admission of
guilt from Trump, but Trump’s organization issued a statement that said, "We
are pleased to announce the complete resolution of all litigation involving
Trump University. While we have no doubt that Trump University would have
prevailed at trial based on the merits of this case, resolution of these
matters allows President-Elect Trump to devote his full attention to the
important issues facing our great nation."
If there is a downside to settling the lawsuits, it is that
we may never know which side is right. Did Trump defraud the students, or is it
merely an opportunity seized upon by students and lawyers hoping for a big
payout?
Removing what would have become a huge distraction enables Trump
to get on with the business of organizing his presidency, even as his political
enemies occupy themselves with petty criticisms about appointments and who he
is talking with, suggestions of who he should be talking with, and arguing
about whether it was FBI Director James Comey’s handling of the email investigation
or the Electoral College that defeated Hillary Clinton, not Donald Trump.
Democrats have begun a move to have the Electoral College,
the Constitutional mechanism to determine who becomes president, replaced by
the popular vote. At the Constitutional Convention, several methods of electing
a president were considered, but the Founders well knew the dangers of
consolidated power. After much debate and compromise
they devised a system that instead distributed power more broadly, balancing
federal powers with those of the states, and providing a voice to all states, not
just the most populous.
As Heritage Foundation legal expert
Hans von Spakovsky noted: “In creating the basic architecture of the American
government, the Founders struggled to satisfy each state’s demand for greater
representation while attempting to balance popular sovereignty against the risk
posed to the minority from majoritarian rule.”
And the result has been that the
Electoral College has provided stability to the process of picking presidents.
Though the national popular vote winner typically wins the presidency, that
vote failed to determine the winner in four previous elections: 1824, 1876,
1888, and 2000, and the republic survived quite well, thank you.
And the wisdom of the Founders has once again been proven in
the 2016 election where the least desirable candidate, Hillary Clinton, wound
up with a comparatively thin popular vote margin of 50.6 percent of the vote to
Trump’s 49.4 percent; 1.4 million votes out of 124.7 million, meaning that
Clinton got 1.15 more votes per hundred voters than Trump did.
A margin this thin is well within the margin of error of
political polling, and hardly worthy of the hysteria that has been demonstrated
by this miniscule difference in vote totals.
What this effort does best is illustrate the level of
desperation, disbelief and unwillingness to accept the outcome that is so firmly
ingrained into the political left and their sub-faction, the major national
media.
But as before, the republic will endure and thrive.
But as before, the republic will endure and thrive.
No comments:
Post a Comment