President Donald Trump is attempting to halt his own overthrow with frequent cabinet changes, a pair of political analysts claimed.
Bret Stephens and Frank Bruni, sharing their thoughts in The New York Times, believe Trump's hiring and firing in recent weeks have been an attempt at preserving loyalty within his cabinet selection. Trump fired Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Attorney General Pam Bondi in quick succession during his second term, marking a dramatic purge of his own cabinet members.
Noem faced criticism for her handling of ICE operations in Minneapolis, where federal agents killed two individuals during enforcement actions. Democratic lawmakers condemned her dismissal as insufficient accountability for these deaths. Despite Trump's public support, he ultimately removed her from office, citing performance concerns and policy disagreements.
Trump subsequently fired Bondi, claiming she failed to aggressively pursue his political enemies and investigate perceived adversaries with sufficient vigor. Her removal signaled Trump's intolerance for any perceived disloyalty or failure to weaponize the Justice Department according to his specifications.
Both firings reflected Trump's broader pattern of removing officials who either questioned his directives or failed to prioritize his personal interests over institutional responsibilities.
Bruni said, "I have come to realize that normal language is inadequate and precedents are irrelevant when it comes to appraising Trump’s cabinet and other senior administration officials. Trump didn’t just hire incompetent people.
"He didn’t just hire lickspittles. He visited some perverse preserve of the morally degenerate — some superstore of grifters and goons — and said, 'I’ll take the worst of the worst. A baker’s dozen, please!' And on this score, the self-proclaimed master dealer got exactly the goods he wanted.
"As for her [Bondi's] firing, perhaps the cultural reference point we should be using right now isn’t “Real Housewives” but Agatha Christie’s “And Then There Were None.” Noem, Bondi, DeRemer — the body count is rising fast.
"I get the feeling that after spending the first year of his second term trying to prove that his White House wouldn’t have the kind of revolving door it did last time around, Trump will be regressing to that velocity of turnover. Watch out, Kash. Keep your head down, Pete. Or maybe I’m gripped not by prescience but by hope. A boy can dream."
Stephens added that Trump's frequent firings reflected an autocratic ruling that would see the cabinet dumbed down further to keep department heads loyal.
He said, "An Egyptian friend of mine, in the years when Hosni Mubarak was dictator, once explained to me that the key to running a long-term autocracy is always to take care that your immediate subordinates are even dumber and more corrupt than you are. That way, they’re too stupid to obstruct or overthrow you, and too compromised to be anything but slavishly loyal.
"At the time he told me this, which was in 2009 or so, I didn’t expect it would describe American government to a ‘T’ in just a few years’ time."