With firings and lax enforcement, Trump moving to dismantle government's
public integrity guardrails
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[February 11, 2025]
By ERIC TUCKER, MICHELLE L. PRICE and ZEKE MILLER
WASHINGTON (AP) — In the first three weeks of his administration,
President Donald Trump has moved with brazen haste to dismantle the
federal government's public integrity guardrails that he frequently
tested during his first term but now seems intent on removing entirely.
In a span of hours on Monday, word came that he had forced out leaders
of offices responsible for government ethics and whistleblower
complaints. And in a boon to corporations, he ordered a pause to
enforcement of a decades-old law that prohibits American companies from
bribing foreign governments to win business. All of that came on top of
the earlier late-night purge of more than a dozen inspectors general who
are tasked with rooting out waste, fraud and abuse at government
agencies.
It's all being done with a stop-me-if-you-dare defiance by a president
who the first time around felt hemmed in by watchdogs, lawyers and
judges tasked with affirming good government and fair play. Now, he
seems determined to break those constraints once and for all in a
historically unprecedented flex of executive power.
“It’s the most corrupt start that we’ve ever seen in the history of the
American presidency," said Norm Eisen, a former U.S. ambassador to the
Czech Republic who was a legal adviser to Democrats during Trump’s first
impeachment.
“The end goal is to avoid accountability this time,” said Princeton
University presidential historian Julian Zelizer. “Not just being
protected by his party and counting on the public to move on when
scandals or problems emerge, but this time by actually removing many of
the key figures whose job it is to oversee” his administration.
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Zelizer added: “It’s a much bolder assertion than in his first term, and
if successful and if all these figures are removed, you'll have a
combination of an executive branch lacking independent voices that will
keep their eye on the ball and then a congressional majority that at
least thus far isn’t really going to cause problems for him.”
Picking up where he left off
To some degree, Trump's early actions reflect a continuation of the path
he blazed in his first term, when he dismissed multiple key inspectors
general — including those leading the Defense Department and
intelligence community — and fired an FBI director and an attorney
general amid a Justice Department investigation into his ties between
his 2016 presidential campaign and Russia.
This time, though, his administration has moved much more swiftly in
reprisal against those he feels previously wronged him — or still could.
His Justice Department last month fired more than a dozen prosecutors
involved in investigations into his hoarding of classified documents and
his efforts to undo the 2020 presidential election, both of which
resulted in since-abandoned indictments after he left office. It's also
demanded a list of all agents who participated in investigations related
to the Jan. 6, 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol, with Trump saying Friday
that he intends to quickly and “surgically” fire some of them.
The actions reflect the administration's intent to keep a tight grip on
the Justice Department and even purge it of investigators seen as
insufficiently loyal, even though career civil servants are typically
not replaced by new presidents. Trump's actions are in keeping with the
dramatic dismissal on his first Friday night in office of nearly 20
inspectors general in a broad cross-section of government agencies, all
in seeming violation of a law requiring that Congress be given 30-day
advance notice of such firings.
The latest moves came Monday, when the recently fired head of the Office
of Special Counsel, which processes whistleblower complaints and handles
the Hatch Act that prohibits federal employees from partisan activities
on the job, sued over his dismissal days earlier. Trump separately fired
the head of the Office of Government Ethics.
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President Donald Trump speaks with reporters as he signs executive
orders in the Oval Office at the White House, Monday, Feb. 10, 2025,
in Washington. (Photo/Alex Brandon)
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He named as acting head of the watchdog agencies Doug Collins, a
loyal ally and former Republican congressman from Georgia who was
recently confirmed as secretary of veteran affairs. But late Monday,
a federal judge in Washington ordered the fired OSC head, Hampton
Dellinger, to be reinstated while a court fight continues over his
removal.
Trump’s administration on Monday also moved to wipe away two
high-profile public integrity cases of elected officials. Trump
pardoned former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich, who was convicted on
political corruption charges that included seeking to sell an
appointment to then-President Barack Obama’s old Senate seat.
Hours later, Trump’s Justice Department ordered federal prosecutors
to drop charges against New York Mayor Eric Adams, who was accused
of accepting bribes of free or discounted travel and illegal
campaign contributions.
“I think Trump has sent an unmistakable message that corruption is
welcome in his new administration," said Eisen, who now works with
State Democracy Defenders Fund, a nonprofit watchdog group that says
it fights “election sabotage and autocracy,” and has been filing
lawsuits against Trump’s administration.
Trump has portrayed the cases the same way he labeled his own
investigations: as politically motivated witch hunts.
Loosening rules related to business
Trump, who in 2016 campaigned on a pledge to rid Washington of
corruption with his “drain the swamp” refrain, has also taken aim at
ethics and watchdog rules when it comes to business.
On Monday, he paused enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices
Act, which prevents U.S. companies from paying bribes to foreign
government officials to win business, until new Attorney General Pam
Bondi can design new guidance.
The White House said the action was needed because American
companies “are prohibited from engaging in practices common among
international competitors, creating an uneven playing field.”
“It sounds good on paper but in practicality it’s a disaster,” Trump
said at the White House.
On his first day in office last month, Trump signed an executive
order that rescinded one issued by former President Joe Biden that
had prohibited executive branch employees from accepting major gifts
from lobbyists and bans people jumping from lobbying jobs to
executive branch jobs, or the reverse, for two years. The bans were
aimed at curbing the “revolving door” in Washington, where incoming
government workers could bring a minefield of ethical conflicts and
later find lucrative lobbying jobs.
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The move came as Trump returned to power with fresh overlaps between
his personal and business interests, including his launch of a new
cryptocurrency token.
His family business, the Trump Organization, meanwhile, adopted a
voluntary agreement that bars it from making deals with foreign
governments but not with private companies abroad, a significant
change from the company’s ethics pact in the first term.
The Trump Organization has in recent months struck deals for hotels
and golf resorts in Vietnam, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates. Government ethics experts have raised concerns that the
president’s personal financial interests in the deals could
influence the way he conducts foreign policy.
___
Price reported from New York.
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