BYΒ WILL WEISSERT
WASHINGTON (AP) βΒ Donald TrumpΒ βs impending return to the White House means heβll want to stand up an entirely new administration from the one that served under PresidentΒ Joe Biden. His team is also pledging that the second wonβt look much like the first one Trump established after his 2016 victory.
The president-elect now has a 75-dayΒ transition periodΒ to build out his team before Inauguration Day arrives on Jan. 20. One top item on the to-do list: filling around 4,000 government positions with political appointees, people who are specifically tapped for their jobs by Trumpβs team.
That includes everyone from the secretary of state and other heads of Cabinet departments to those selected to serve part-time on boards and commissions. Around 1,200 of those presidential appointments require Senate confirmation, which should be easier with the Senate now shifting to Republican control.
Hereβs what to expect:
What will the transition look like?
Though the turnover in the new administration will be total, Trump will be familiar with what he needs to accomplish. He built an entirely new administration for his first term and has definite ideas on what to do differently this time.
Heβs already floated some names.
Trump said at his victory party early Wednesday that former presidential hopeful andΒ anti-vaccinationΒ activistΒ Robert Kennedy Jr.Β will be tapped to βhelp make America healthy again,β adding that βweβre going to let him go to it.β Ahead of the election, Trump didnβt reject Kennedyβs calls toΒ end fluoridated water. Trump has also pledged to make South African-bornΒ Elon Musk, a vocal supporter of the Trump campaign, a secretary of federal βcost-cutting,β and the Tesla CEO has suggested he can find trillions of dollars in government spending to wipe out.
The transition is not just about filling jobs. Most presidents-elect also receive daily or near-daily intelligence briefings during the transition.
In 2008, outgoing President George W. Bush personally briefed President-elect Barack Obama on U.S. covert operations. When Trump was preparing to take office in 2016, Obamaβs national security adviser, Susan Rice, briefed Michael Flynn, her designated successor in the new administration. In 2020, Trumpβs legal challenges of the electionβs results delayed the start of the transition process for weeks, though, and presidential briefings with Biden didnβt begin until Nov. 30.
Trumpβs transition is being led primarily by friends and family, including Kennedy Jr. and former Democratic presidential candidateΒ Tulsi Gabbard, as well as the president-electβs adult sons, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, and his running mate, JD Vance. Transition co-chairs are Cantor Fitzgerald CEO Howard Lutnick and Linda McMahon, the former wrestling executive who previously led the Small Business Administration during Trumpβs first term.
Lutnick said this yearβs operation is βabout as different as possibleβ from the 2016 effort, which was first led byΒ Chris Christie. After he won eight years ago, Trump fired Christie, tossed out plans the former New Jersey governor had made and gave the job of running the transition to then-Vice President-electΒ Mike Pence.
Unlike the campaign of Democratic Vice PresidentΒ Kamala Harris, Trumpβs team didnβt sign any pre-Election DayΒ transition agreements with the General Services Administration, which essentially acts as the federal governmentβs landlord. He has therefore already missed deadlines to agree with GSA on logistical matters like office space and tech support and with the White House on access to agencies, including documents, employees and facilities.
New transition rules
In 2020, Trump argued that widespread voter fraud βΒ which hadnβt actually occurredΒ β cost him the election, delaying the start of the transition from his outgoing administration to Bidenβs incoming one for weeks.
Four years ago, the Trump-appointed head of the GSA,Β Emily Murphy, determined that she had no legal standing to determine a winner in the presidential race because Trump was still challenging the results in court. That held up funding and cooperation for the transition.
It wasnβt until Trumpβs efforts to subvert election resultsΒ had collapsed across key statesΒ that Murphy agreed to formally βΒ ascertain a president-electΒ β and begin the transition process. Trump eventually posted on social media that his administration would cooperate.
To prevent that kind of holdup in future transitions, the Presidential Transition Improvement Act of 2022 mandates that the transition process begin five days after the election β even if the winner is still in dispute. That is designed to avoid long delays and means that βan βaffirmative ascertainmentβ by the GSA is no longer a prerequisite for gaining transition support services,β according to agency guidelines on the new rules.
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