The Trump White House has no idea what the Trump White House just did
At Karoline Leavitt’s first briefing, she didn’t have much to say about the crisis her boss created.
Reporters
raise their hands to try and ask questions as White House press
secretary Karoline Leavitt holds her first briefing on Tuesday. (Jabin
Botsford/The Washington Post)
President Donald Trump threw the nation into chaos
once again on Monday night with his order declaring a “pause” of
indefinite length on $3 trillion in federal grants and loans. Among the
government programs facing an immediate cutoff: Meals on Wheels, Head
Start, school lunches, child-care help, student loans, disaster relief,
crime-fighting assistance and Medicaid, which provides health care to 82 million Americans.
This is, at any rate, what people think is happening, because no one has any idea — including the Trump administration.
The
day after Trump’s bombshell, and just four hours before the funding was
set to cease, Karoline Leavitt, the 27-year-old White House press
secretary, strode onto the podium to give her first briefing. It quickly
became apparent that she had no clue about the crisis her boss had
created.
“There’s
no uncertainty in this building,” she informed the Associated Press’s
Zeke Miller, blaming the chaos in the nation on the news media, which
had “confused” people. She promised Americans that Social Security and
other “assistance that is going directly to individuals will not be
impacted” — small reassurance, because most such federal assistance goes
through states.
How
long would the cutoff be? Leavitt could only say that it was
“temporary” and that Russell Vought, Trump’s nominee to run the Office
of Management and Budget, “told me to tell all of you that the line to
his office is open for other federal agencies.” So the guy directing
this cataclysmic “pause” is an unconfirmed nominee who doesn’t even work
for the federal government? (Later on Tuesday, a federal judge delayed the freeze until at least Feb. 3.)
Leavitt
was asked why charities and service providers weren’t given more
warning. “There was notice,” Leavitt said. Yep — about 20 hours.
Peppered
with questions about which programs were being cut off, she could offer
only to “get you the full list after this briefing,” though she
acknowledged that such a list had not yet come to “fruition.”
“Are
you guaranteeing here,” asked David Sanger of the New York Times, “that
no individual now on Medicaid would see a cutoff because of the pause?”
Replied the press secretary: “I'll check back on that and get back to you.”
In
just eight days on the job, Trump has taken a wrecking ball to the
federal government, and he and his aides apparently couldn’t be bothered
to give any thought to the damage and chaos that would ensue. It’s not
just the spending freeze. It’s the willy-nilly, and probably illegal,
firing of federal employees, the federal hiring freeze, the moratorium on foreign aid,
the threats and bullying unleashed on allies, and the moves to muzzle
government agencies to eliminate accountability. The sheer volume of
executive orders and actions stunned critics into silence. But, as the
scene in the briefing room illustrated on Tuesday, reality is already
beginning to catch up with Trump.
Foreign
journalists and others jammed into the aisles in advance of Leavitt’s
appearance, forcing the regular correspondents to shove their way to
their seats in the overheated room: “Excuse me! ... Make a hole! ... The
circus is back!” An aide came out before Leavitt to give preflight
instructions to the aisle standers. A reporter asked whether there was
any guidance about seat-belt use.
“Fasten your seat belts,” she suggested.
Good advice. It was going to get bumpy.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt at her first press briefing on Tuesday. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
Leavitt
appeared wearing a purple jacket and a gold cross, of a size commonly
associated with the warding off of vampires. She revealed several
helpful nuggets, including that “President Trump has always been the
hardest-working man in politics,” that “the golden age of America has
most definitely begun” and that Europe has “no greater ally” than Trump.
She also disclosed the “news” that Trump had determined that those
drones in New Jersey were hobbyist and commercial aircraft and “not the
enemy” — precisely the same news that the Biden administration announced
on Dec. 17. She volunteered her view that all undocumented immigrants
“are criminals” and, asked about Black History Month, said “we will
continue to celebrate … the contributions that all Americans, regardless
of race,” have made.
Leavitt
told reporters she would “commit to telling the truth from this podium
every single day,” then broke the vow with almost every sentence that
followed.
The
Post’s Isaac Arnsdorf asked what Trump had meant by his social media
post saying, “The United States Military just entered the Great State of
California and, under Emergency Powers, TURNED ON THE WATER.” (The
California Department of Water Resources felt compelled to rebut this:
“The military did not enter California. The federal government
restarted federal water pumps after they were offline for maintenance
for three days. State water supplies in Southern California remain
plentiful.”)
Leavitt repeated the fiction that “the water was turned on” because of Trump’s “pressure campaign” on state officials.
The
Washington Examiner’s Christian Datoc pointed out that “egg prices have
skyrocketed since President Trump took office. So what, specifically,
is he doing to lower those costs for Americans?”
Leavitt offered nothing other than an attack against former president Joe Biden for “sleeping” and for “the mass killing of more than 100 million chickens”
— the monster! — which caused “a lack of chicken supply in this
country, therefore lack of egg supply.” Ah, the old chicken-and-egg
response. In reality, the cause of high egg prices under both presidents
has been avian flu, but this didn’t stop Trump from blaming Biden
during the campaign. What’s sauce for the goose …
The
press secretary also dutifully relayed her boss’s view that the law is
whatever he says it is. The Friday night massacre of inspectors general
without the legally required 30-day notice and the firing of career
prosecutors at the Justice Department, in violation of civil-service
protections? Leavitt said “it is the belief of this White House ... that
the president was within his executive authority to do that.” The order
abolishing the constitutional guarantee of birthright citizenship?
“This administration believes that birthright citizenship is
unconstitutional.”
And,
of course, she parroted Trump’s routine attacks against the press,
saying “Americans’ trust in mass media has fallen to a record low.” She
awarded the second question of the briefing to right-wing Breitbart News
and, a few questions later, went to Brian Glenn from the MAGA outlet
Real America’s Voice.
“You look great,” Glenn informed her.
“You’re doing a great job.” The questioner then went on to praise “how
just transparent President Trump has been the last five or six years”
and the “global powerful respect” world leaders have for him, “not only
to engage in economic diplomacy with these countries but also world
peace.”
Do we really have to listen to this Dear Leader drivel while Trump disembowels Medicaid, Meals on Wheels and Head Start?
I’ll check back on that and get back to you.
Dana
Milbank is an opinion columnist for The Washington Post. He sketches
the foolish, the fallacious and the felonious in politics. His latest
book, "Fools on the Hill: The Hooligans, Saboteurs, Conspiracy Theories
and Dunces who Burned Down the House" (Little, Brown) is out September
24.