Trump
Disavowed Project 2025 During the Campaign. Not Anymore.
President-elect
Donald J. Trump has filled his administration with people who have ties to the
right-wing manifesto.
Zolan Kanno-YoungsErica L. Green
By Zolan Kanno-Youngs and Erica L. Green
The reporters cover the White House and the presidential
transition.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/29/us/politics/trump-project-2025.html
Nov. 29, 2024
Updated 1:06 p.m. ET
During the campaign, President-elect Donald J. Trump swore
he had “nothing to do with” a right-wing policy blueprint known as Project 2025
that would overhaul the federal government, even though many of those involved
in developing the plans were his allies.
Mr. Trump even described many of the policy goals as
“absolutely ridiculous.” And during his debate with Vice President Kamala
Harris, he said he was “not going to read it.”
Now, as he plans his agenda for his return to the White
House, Mr. Trump has recruited at least a half dozen architects and supporters
of the plan to oversee key issues, including the federal budget, intelligence
gathering and his promised plans for mass deportations.
The shift, his critics say, is not exactly a surprise. Mr.
Trump disavowed the 900-page manifesto when polls showed it was extremely
unpopular with voters. Now that he has won a second term, they say, he appears
to be brushing those concerns aside.
“President-elect Trump has dropped all pretense and is
charging ahead hand in hand with the right-wing industry players shaping an
agenda he denied for the whole campaign,” said Tony Carrk, the executive
director of Accountable.US, a government watchdog agency that has been tracking
Mr. Trump’s cabinet picks with ties to the project.
A set of conservative policy proposals called Project 2025
has put into words what a second term for Donald J. Trump could look like.
Trump has distanced himself from the plan, but it aligns with many of his
campaign promises. Political reporter, Jonathan Swan, explains.
Mr. Trump’s cabinet picks and other appointments have
reaffirmed the fears of many Democrats and government watchdogs who say Mr.
Trump will use Project 2025 as a road map to expand his executive power,
replace civil servants with political loyalists and gut government agencies
like the Department of Education.
Mr. Trump has picked Russell T. Vought, one of the authors
of Project 2025, to lead the powerful Office of Management and Budget. In
choosing Mr. Vought, Mr. Trump will have someone who views the position as far
more expansive than just overseeing the budget.
Mr. Vought wrote in Project 2025 that the person picked for
the job should view themselves as an “approximation of the president’s mind,”
while establishing a reputation of the keeper of “commander’s intent.”
In the report, Mr. Vought wrote that the incoming
administration should overhaul executive branch institutions, such as the
National Security Council and National Economic Council to align with Mr.
Trump’s agenda, while abolishing White House offices for domestic climate
policy and gender policy.
Earlier this year, Mr. Trump tried to distance himself from
his former staffers like Mr. Vought, who also served as budget chief during his
first term. Democrats were ramping up attacks that tied Mr. Trump to Project
2025 as voters grew unsettled by its promises to amass power in the executive
branch.
“I have no idea who is behind it,” Mr. Trump said on social
media in July, despite his ties to former staffers like Mr. Vought.
In a statement this week, Karoline Leavitt, a spokeswoman
for the Trump campaign, argued Mr. Trump “never had anything to do” with
Project 2025.
“All of President Trump’s cabinet nominees and appointments
are wholeheartedly committed to President Trump’s agenda, not the agenda of
outside groups,” Ms. Leavitt said.
Mr. Trump has also tapped Stephen Miller to be his deputy
chief of staff for policy and Thomas Homan to be a “border czar,” positions
that do not require Senate confirmation. Mr. Homan is listed as a contributor
to Project 2025. The legal organization Mr. Miller founded during Mr. Trump’s
time out of office, America First Legal, was listed at one point as an adviser
group to Project 2025.
Both officials will be responsible for elements of Mr.
Trump’s goals of establishing detention camps and carrying out mass
deportations. The Project 2025 blueprint also recommends rescinding
restrictions that prevented immigration agents from carrying out arrests in
schools and churches.
Mr. Trump’s pick to lead the Federal Communications
Commission, Brendan Carr, wrote a chapter in Project 2025 that called for
reining in “Big Tech,” eliminating immunity protections for social media
companies and imposing transparency rules on companies like Google, Facebook
and YouTube.
“It is hard to imagine another industry in which a greater
gap exists between power and accountability,” he wrote.
Other contributors to Project 2025 include Pete Hoekstra,
Mr. Trump’s former ambassador to the Netherlands and his current pick to be
ambassador to Canada, as well as John Ratcliffe, Mr. Trump’s pick to lead the
C.I.A.
A former director of national intelligence, Mr. Ratcliffe
was cited repeatedly in the document, including in a chapter on the
intelligence community written by Dustin Carmack. Mr. Carmack was Mr.
Ratcliffe’s chief of staff when he served as Mr. Trump’s director of National
Intelligence in his first administration.
Mr. Carmack made the case in Project 2025 for empowering the
director of national intelligence, as the leader of the intelligence community.
He also said the leader needed to “address the widely promoted ‘woke’ culture
that has spread throughout the federal government with identity politics and
‘social justice’ advocacy replacing such traditional American values as
patriotism, colorblindness, and even workplace competence.”
Alex Floyd, the rapid response director of the Democratic
National Committee said that “after months of lies to the American people,
Donald Trump is taking off the mask.”
“He’s plotting a Project 2025 Cabinet to enact his dangerous
vision starting on day one,” Mr. Floyd said.
Zolan Kanno-Youngs is a White House correspondent, covering
President Biden and his administration. More about Zolan Kanno-Youngs
Erica L. Green is a White House correspondent, covering
President Biden and his administration. More about Erica L. Green
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