Trump fills his government with billionaires after running on a
working-class message
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[January 28, 2025]
By BILL BARROW
ATLANTA (AP) — President Donald Trump’s brash populism has always
involved incongruence: the billionaire businessman-politician stirring
the passions of millions who, regardless of the U.S. economy’s
trajectory, could never afford to live in his Manhattan skyscraper or
visit his club in south Florida.
His second White House is looking a lot like the inside of Mar-a-Lago,
with extremely wealthy Americans taking key roles in his administration.
The world’s richest man, Elon Musk, is overseeing a new Department of
Government Efficiency. Billionaires or mega-millionaires are lined up to
run the treasury, commerce, interior and education departments, NASA and
the Small Business Administration, and fill key foreign posts.
“He’s bringing in folks who have had great success in the private
sector,” said Debbie Dooley, an early 2015 Trump supporter and onetime
national organizer in the anti-establishment Tea Party movement. “If you
need to have brain surgery, you want the proven brain surgeons.”
Others raise concerns about conflicts of interest at odds with Trump’s
pledge to fight for “forgotten men and women” in a country where the
median household net worth is about $193,000 and median annual household
income is about $81,000.
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“It’s hard to conceive how the wealthiest set of Cabinet nominees and
White House appointments in history will understand what average working
people are going through,” said former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, who
served under President Bill Clinton and has warned for decades about the
nation’s widening wealth and wage gaps.
Countered Dooley: “Trump sets the agenda. If they won’t enact his
policies, then they will hear him say what we hear on ‘The Apprentice’
all the time: ‘You’re fired!’”
Here is a closer look at some of Trump’s picks, their net worth
according to Forbes, and what the choices could mean:
Elon Musk
Musk (net worth estimated above $400 billion) is chairing the new
Department of Government Efficiency, which is a special commission
charged with slashing federal spending. The extensive ties his
businesses have to the government have raised questions about Musk's
potential conflicts in the role.
Linda McMahon
McMahon was picked to be Trump's secretary of education. She is the wife
of Vince McMahon, who is worth at least $3 billion.
The former WWE wrestling executive will lead an agency that many
conservatives have called for abolishing altogether. While that’s a
heavy lift politically, McMahon and Trump have endorsed an expansion of
“school choice,” programs that steer taxpayer money to private school
tuition. She also could be in charge of implementing Trump’s proposals
to withhold federal money from public schools — K-12 and higher
education — that do not meet White House demands to modify or scrap
diversity programs.
Doug Burgum
The North Dakota governor (estimated net worth $1.1 billion) made his
money as a software entrepreneur. Burgum impressed Trump during his own
failed bid for the GOP’s 2024 presidential nomination. As interior
secretary, Burgum would be charged with implementing Trump’s “Drill,
baby, drill” promise — making it even easier for energy companies to tap
fossil fuel resources, including from public lands.
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Elon Musk reacts as President-elect Donald Trump speaks at a rally
ahead of the 60th Presidential Inauguration, Sunday, Jan. 19, 2025,
in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
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Scott Bessent
Forbes has not yet identified Bessent as a billionaire, but the
veteran hedge fund manager confirmed Monday as treasury secretary
certainly is worth many hundreds of millions. At Treasury, he will
play key roles in selling and implementing a number of Trump’s
signature policies: reinstating the 2017 tax cuts tilted to
corporations and wealthy individuals, imposing tariffs on many
imports and cutting taxes on overtime wages, Social Security
benefits and tip income.
Reich, the former labor secretary, noted that Bessent and his fellow
wealthy Cabinet designees stand to benefit personally from Trump’s
tax ideas. Trump tax policies, which helped widen the deficit in
Trump’s first term, are juxtaposed with Bessent’s warnings about the
dangers of rising U.S. debt and the cost of annual interest payments
to the government’s bond holders.
Howard Lutnick
An apparent runner-up to head Treasury, Lutnick (estimated net worth
$1.5 billion) has been nominated to be secretary of commerce.
Lutnick, who made his fortune as a financial services executive, is
still slated for a high-profile post that will put him at the center
of Trump’s promised trade wars with China and other nations,
including Mexico and Canada. Commerce also oversees several
agencies, including the Census Bureau, whose calculations are key to
determining the funding distributions of programs across the federal
government.
Kelly Loeffler
The Georgia businesswoman named to lead the Small Business
Administration was the wealthiest member of the Senate during her
brief stay on Capitol Hill. Loeffler is married to Jeffrey Sprecher,
CEO of Intercontinental Exchange, the publicly traded firm that owns
the New York Stock Exchange. That’s not the center of commerce for
the SBA’s usual clientele. The agency was founded in 1953 and
describes itself as “the only cabinet-level federal agency fully
dedicated to small business” by providing “counseling, capital, and
contracting expertise as the nation’s only go-to resource and voice
for small businesses.”
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As a senator, Loeffler faced ethics complaints over alleged insider
trading tied to stock trades she and her husband made as members of
Congress first started receiving briefings related to the
coronavirus pandemic. The trades occurred weeks before the pandemic
caused markets to plummet. Justice Department and Senate inquiries
later found no wrongdoing on Loeffler’s part.
Jared Isaacman
Isaacman, another financial services billionaire, was the first
wealthy individual to take a space walk through Musk’s company,
SpaceX. This choice, as much as any, illustrates Trump’s lean to the
wealthy private sector, given that billionaires like Musk and Amazon
chief Jeff Bezos are now competing in a space sector that was once
the province of the federal government and the agency that Isaacman
would lead as NASA administrator.
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