What delicious irony there is in the
appointment of Governor Rick Perry to be Secretary of Energy, a department he
once vowed to abolish, and of Scott Pruitt to run the EPA, a lawless agency he
has long fought to rein in. Similarly, Betsy deVos will, when confirmed as
Secretary of Education, ignore the anguished wails of teachers’ unions when she
returns to parents the right to choose where best to educate their kids.
These are but three examples of federal
departments that have entangled this country in cobwebs of federal regulations
while usurping the constitutional prerogatives of Congress. Bloated bureaucracies
are the very institutions that President Trump had in mind when he stated in
his inaugural address that he meant to return the power to the people.
Except for quixotic flailing at
unessential issues such as crowd sizes and illegal voting, President Trump, I think,
has had a very good start. My favorite image is of him sitting at his desk signing
executive orders, while Chief of Staff Reince Priebus stands at his side
holding a stack of more orders to be signed. The caption for this image might
very well be, “The President at work doing what he said he was going to do.”
There is more to the job, of course,
than reversing President Obama’s extra-constitutional orders. Much of what
President Trump has promised to do, like tax reform and repealing and replacing
ObamaCare, will require the cooperation of Congress, not to mention a way to
circumvent the obnoxious obstructionism of Senator Schumer and the Far Left of
the Democratic Party. And let’s see how he establishes bilateral agreements
with disappointed trans-pacific partners and renegotiates NAFTA with the
pouting President of Mexico. Are we expecting too much of the Great Negotiator?