Trump
cabinet flunkies hail wannabe Caesar and Elon, his oligarch pal
Special
adviser showed instinctive feel for authoritarianism as he addressed the
president’s first full cabinet meeting
David Smith
David Smith
in Washington
Wed 26 Feb
2025 16.51 EST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/feb/26/trump-cabinet-elon-musk
On Tuesday,
just over a mile from the White House, the classicist Mary Beard spoke to an
audience about Roman emperors. “An autocrat is somebody who kills you when he’s
being his most generous,” she remarked. “You go to dinner, you think, wow, this
is wonderful! But the generosity of the autocrat is always potentially lethal.”
On
Wednesday, Donald Trump held his first full cabinet meeting. The mood was warm
and convivial and, some might say, generous. Housing secretary Scott Turner
offered a prayer that included: “Thank you, God, for President Trump.”
Was it just
an accident that the TV camera framed the scene as the antithesis of DEI?
Viewers could see seven men in suits with Trump in the middle, then another row
of seven men in suits sitting behind. Nearly all of them were white. (Yes,
there were women and people of colour at the meeting – but not many.)
The
Vice-president, JD Vance, was in attendance but there was no doubt whom this
emperor had appointed as consul. Trump invited Elon Musk, the tech billionaire
running the so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge), to speak
before any of his cabinet secretaries after claiming that everyone present was
supportive.
Wearing a
black “Make America great again” cap, Musk jokingly referred to himself as
“humble tech support” – people laughed dutifully – and claimed that his
haphazard efforts to take a chainsaw to the federal government can save a
trillion dollars and dig the country out of debt. “It’s not an optional thing,
it’s an essential thing,” he said. “If we don’t do this, America will go
bankrupt.”
It sounds
fine in theory. But Doge, mostly consisting of young male software engineers
fuelled by pizza and Red Bull, has been a disaster. It fired the people who
oversee the nuclear weapons stockpile then hastily tried to rehire them, only
to find they were hard to contact because they could not access their work
email accounts. It claimed to have saved $8bn on a terminated contract that was
actually worth only $8m. Musk falsely stated that the US spent $50m on condoms
for Gazans. And it emerged this week Doge quietly deleted the top five items
from its public ledger of alleged savings after they turned out to be nothing
of the sort.
Musk – who
brought similar unholy chaos to Twitter when he bought it – admitted to the
cabinet that Doge will make mistakes, but said it will fix them quickly. “So,
for example, with USAid, one of the things we accidentally canceled briefly was
Ebola prevention. So we restored the Ebola prevention immediately, and there
was no interruption.”
Not
reassuring.
Then came
the most autocratic episode of the meeting. Trump, both generous and lethal,
asked his cabinet: “Is anybody unhappy with Elon? If you are, we’ll throw him
out of here.”
To the
crocodiles? Or as his pal Vladimir Putin favours, from a high window? From this
assembly of fawners, flatterers and flunkies, there was nervous laughter and
applause.
Triumphant,
the president assured reporters: “They have a lot of respect for Elon, that
he’s doing this, and some disagree a little bit but I will tell you for the
most part I think everyone’s not only happy – they’re thrilled.”
Game
respects game. Musk, a fan boy of far-right movements all over Europe, showed
an impressively instinctive feel for totalitarianism.
He said:
“President Trump has put together I think the best cabinet ever, literally, and
I do not give false praise. This is an incredible group of people. I don’t
think such a talented team has ever been assembled. I think it’s literally the
best cabinet the country’s ever had … ”
Then came a
telling slip from the world’s richest man: “I think the company [sic] should be
incredibly appreciative of the people in this room.”
The cabinet
on which Musk lavished such praise includes Pete Hegseth, a former Fox News
host accused of sexual assault and alcohol abuse, and Robert F Kennedy Jr, a
vaccine conspiracy theorist who once dumped a dead bear cub in New York’s
Central Park. Less Marvel’s Avengers than Star Wars cantina.
Kennedy was
asked by reporters about a measles outbreak in Texas in which a child
reportedly died, the first measles fatality in the US for a decade. His
lackluster response: “It’s not unusual. We have measles outbreaks every year.”
The whole
meeting was yet another sorry exercise in worshipping an authoritarian and
normalising a bully. Musk tried to defend the emails he sent to government
employees, asking what they did last week, as not a “performance review” but a
“pulse check review” because some people on the government payroll are dead.
Trump
rounded off the meeting by observing: “The country’s got bloated and fat and
disgusting and incompetently run.”
Yet as Jon
Stewart noted this week on Comedy Central’s The Daily Show, Doge will not touch
the $3bn in subsidies given to oil and gas companies, a hedge fund loophole
worth $1.3bn a year, or the $2tn given to defence contractors to build a
fighter jet that will soon be obsolete. “This is where the real money is,”
Stewart said.
Not even a
functioning democracy ever did much about those. So hopes for a country run by
a wannabe Caesar and his oligarch pal are not high.
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