Although President Donald Trump’s many foes in the Democratic Party and mainstream media have been attacking him in recent days for the Cabinet nominations he’s already made ahead of his second term in the White House.

But in the opinion of one well-connected political insider, even Trump’s most controversial picks — notably Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to helm the Department of Health and Human Services and Matt Gaetz to serve as attorney general — will most likely be confirmed by Congress.

Even though some might find Trump’s choices “unfathomable,” Mark Halperin explained: “Tens of millions of Americans share Donald Trump’s beliefs about these departments and about what needs to be done.”

This was just the latest analysis Halperin has offered in the days since the election, as the Daily Caller reported:

“If you look at all the Republican presidents since Reagan, including Reagan — Bush I, Bush II were never going to be bulldozers of the establishment. They just weren’t. Bush 43 looked for some change, no doubt, but he was not a bulldozer against the establishment,” Halperin said. “Reagan talked that way, but he had a Democratic-controlled House and, some of the time, a Democratic-controlled Senate, and did not really follow through on this rhetoric of fundamental change.”

“Trump I did some things along those lines, but really, if you kind of tally it up — and of course COVID intervened — but if you tally it up, there wasn’t a ton of fundamental change. There was changes in the tax code, changes in energy policy, changes in regulation, but not a fundamental remaking of what people in MAGA-land would call ‘deep state,’ of the culture, of the liberal culture, moving vast numbers of federal employees out of Washington,” he continued. “For all of the talk of Project 2025 — which Donald Trump did not write or own, but the Democrats tried to make a big campaign issue of it — there is a desire to fundamentally change things.”

Trump’s Cabinet choices have been the topic of significant social media conversation among those who approve of the choices as well as those who don’t.

While anti-Trump mouthpieces are quick to label Trump’s picks as extreme, at least a few Democrats are actually relieved to hear his choices, as the New York Post reported:

A handful of Democrats and anti-Donald Trump Republicans have offered cautious praise for the president-elect’s early picks to staff up his second administration, especially in foreign policy roles.

Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-Fla.) led the chorus after Trump tapped Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY) to serve as US ambassador to the United Nations late Sunday.

“For those of us, who have been fighting antisemitism at the United Nations, they’re about to get some needed medicine [in] @EliseStefanik,” Moskowitz, who was re-elected to a second term last week, posted on X Monday evening.

Here’s some additional coverage of Trump’s developing administration:

This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport.

View the original article here.

 

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