Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
A long-harbored conservative dream - the dismantling of the "administrative state" - is taking place
Last edited Tue Aug 22, 2017, 11:59 AM - Edit history (1)
Do.Not.Be.Distracted.
Retweeted by Margarita Noriega: https://twitter.com/margarita
Trump recently: "We're fixing the inner cities." Meanwhile, the actual reality at the dep't charged with doing so:
Link to tweet
Is Anybody Home at HUD?
A long-harbored conservative dream the dismantling of the administrative state is taking place under Secretary Ben Carson.
by Alec MacGillis
ProPublica, Aug. 22, 2017, 8 a.m.
This story was co-published with New York magazine.
....
Despite its Democratic roots, Republican administrations have historically assumed stewardship over HUD with varying degrees of enthusiasm among the departments more notable secretaries were Republicans George Romney and Jack Kemp, the idiosyncratic champion of supply-side economics and inner-city renewal. ... Now, however, HUD faced an existential crisis. The new presidents then-chief strategist, Steve Bannon, had called in February for the deconstruction of the administrative state. It was not hard to guess that, for a White House that swept to power on a wave of racially tinged rural resentment and anti-welfare sentiment, high on the demolition list might be a department with urban in its name. The administrations preliminary budget outline had already signaled deep cuts for HUD. And Donald Trump had chosen to lead the department someone with zero experience in government or social policy the nominee whose unsuitability most mirrored Trumps lack of preparation to run the country.
This prospect was causing alarm even among HUDs former Republican leaders. At {a dinner at the Metropolitan Club in Washington, D.C., for the new chief of that department, Ben Carson, and five other former secretaries whose joint tenure stretched all the way back to Gerald Ford}, George W. Bushs second secretary, Alphonso Jackson, warned Carson against cutting further into HUDs manpower. (Many regional offices have shuttered in recent years.) Carla Hills, who ran the department under President Ford, put in a plug for the Community Development Block Grant program, noting that Ford had created it in 1974 precisely in order to give local governments more leeway over how to spend federal assistance.
The tone was collegial, built on the hopeful assumption that Carson wanted to do right by the department. We were trying to be supportive, Henry Cisneros, from the Clinton administration, told me. But it was hard for the ex-secretaries to get a read on Carsons plans, not least because the whisper-voiced retired pediatric neurosurgeon was being overshadowed by an eighth person at the table: his wife, Candy. An energetic former real-estate agent who is an accomplished violinist and has co-authored four books with her husband, she had been spending far more time inside the departments headquarters at LEnfant Plaza than anyone could recall a secretarys spouse doing in the past, only one of many oddities that HUD employees were encountering in the Trump era. Shed even taken the mic before Carson made his introductory speech to the department. Were really excited about working with She broke off, as if detecting the puzzlement of the audience. Well, hes really. .... Then there was the mystery of why Carsons family was taking such a visible role in the department. There was the omnipresent Mrs. Carson. Even more striking, however, had been the active role of the secretarys second-oldest son. Ben Carson Jr., who goes by B.J. and co-founded an investment firm in Columbia, Maryland, that specializes in infrastructure, health care and workforce development, was showing up on email chains within the department and appearing often at headquarters. One day, he was seen leaving the 10th-floor office of David Eagles, the new COO, who was crafting a HUD reorganization to accompany the cuts.
....
In early July, Ben Carson went on the next leg of his listening tour: Baltimore. I was expecting the department to make a big deal of his return to his longtime home city. But instead, after the poor press coverage from the previous rounds of community outreach, the itinerary for the first day was kept private. ... I managed to get my hands on the schedule and tagged along with a photographer. This did not please Carsons entourage, which included, among others, a high-strung advance man in a bow tie, several security officers, Candy Carson, Ben Jr. and even his wife. When we arrived at the café where Carson and his family were having lunch with the mayor of Baltimore, Bow Tie arranged to have the Carsons rush out through the kitchen area to a back alley to avoid us. When, at the next stop, I was accidentally allowed into a meeting that Carson was holding at the citys housing authority, Bow Tie leaped across the room to eject me. By the next stop, at a tour of the redevelopment near Johns Hopkins Hospital, one of the federal agents guarding Carson took my picture as I stood on the sidewalk chatting with a neighbor. By the last stop, dinner with Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan at a deluxe waterfront restaurant opened by Under Armour CEO Kevin Plank, I was unsurprised when a Carson aide went to the maître d to report my presence at the bar. This was Trumpian anti-press spirit taken to a new level: protectiveness of a government executive to the point of seeking invisibility.
....
Do you have access to information about the federal government that should be public? Email alec.macgillis@propublica.org, or heres how to send tips and documents to ProPublica securely.
For more coverage, read ProPublicas previous reporting on the Trump administration.
Like this story? Sign up for our daily newsletter to get more of our best work.
Alec MacGillis covers politics for ProPublica.
https://twitter.com/AlecMacGillis
A long-harbored conservative dream the dismantling of the administrative state is taking place under Secretary Ben Carson.
by Alec MacGillis
ProPublica, Aug. 22, 2017, 8 a.m.
This story was co-published with New York magazine.
....
Despite its Democratic roots, Republican administrations have historically assumed stewardship over HUD with varying degrees of enthusiasm among the departments more notable secretaries were Republicans George Romney and Jack Kemp, the idiosyncratic champion of supply-side economics and inner-city renewal. ... Now, however, HUD faced an existential crisis. The new presidents then-chief strategist, Steve Bannon, had called in February for the deconstruction of the administrative state. It was not hard to guess that, for a White House that swept to power on a wave of racially tinged rural resentment and anti-welfare sentiment, high on the demolition list might be a department with urban in its name. The administrations preliminary budget outline had already signaled deep cuts for HUD. And Donald Trump had chosen to lead the department someone with zero experience in government or social policy the nominee whose unsuitability most mirrored Trumps lack of preparation to run the country.
This prospect was causing alarm even among HUDs former Republican leaders. At {a dinner at the Metropolitan Club in Washington, D.C., for the new chief of that department, Ben Carson, and five other former secretaries whose joint tenure stretched all the way back to Gerald Ford}, George W. Bushs second secretary, Alphonso Jackson, warned Carson against cutting further into HUDs manpower. (Many regional offices have shuttered in recent years.) Carla Hills, who ran the department under President Ford, put in a plug for the Community Development Block Grant program, noting that Ford had created it in 1974 precisely in order to give local governments more leeway over how to spend federal assistance.
The tone was collegial, built on the hopeful assumption that Carson wanted to do right by the department. We were trying to be supportive, Henry Cisneros, from the Clinton administration, told me. But it was hard for the ex-secretaries to get a read on Carsons plans, not least because the whisper-voiced retired pediatric neurosurgeon was being overshadowed by an eighth person at the table: his wife, Candy. An energetic former real-estate agent who is an accomplished violinist and has co-authored four books with her husband, she had been spending far more time inside the departments headquarters at LEnfant Plaza than anyone could recall a secretarys spouse doing in the past, only one of many oddities that HUD employees were encountering in the Trump era. Shed even taken the mic before Carson made his introductory speech to the department. Were really excited about working with She broke off, as if detecting the puzzlement of the audience. Well, hes really. .... Then there was the mystery of why Carsons family was taking such a visible role in the department. There was the omnipresent Mrs. Carson. Even more striking, however, had been the active role of the secretarys second-oldest son. Ben Carson Jr., who goes by B.J. and co-founded an investment firm in Columbia, Maryland, that specializes in infrastructure, health care and workforce development, was showing up on email chains within the department and appearing often at headquarters. One day, he was seen leaving the 10th-floor office of David Eagles, the new COO, who was crafting a HUD reorganization to accompany the cuts.
....
In early July, Ben Carson went on the next leg of his listening tour: Baltimore. I was expecting the department to make a big deal of his return to his longtime home city. But instead, after the poor press coverage from the previous rounds of community outreach, the itinerary for the first day was kept private. ... I managed to get my hands on the schedule and tagged along with a photographer. This did not please Carsons entourage, which included, among others, a high-strung advance man in a bow tie, several security officers, Candy Carson, Ben Jr. and even his wife. When we arrived at the café where Carson and his family were having lunch with the mayor of Baltimore, Bow Tie arranged to have the Carsons rush out through the kitchen area to a back alley to avoid us. When, at the next stop, I was accidentally allowed into a meeting that Carson was holding at the citys housing authority, Bow Tie leaped across the room to eject me. By the next stop, at a tour of the redevelopment near Johns Hopkins Hospital, one of the federal agents guarding Carson took my picture as I stood on the sidewalk chatting with a neighbor. By the last stop, dinner with Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan at a deluxe waterfront restaurant opened by Under Armour CEO Kevin Plank, I was unsurprised when a Carson aide went to the maître d to report my presence at the bar. This was Trumpian anti-press spirit taken to a new level: protectiveness of a government executive to the point of seeking invisibility.
....
Do you have access to information about the federal government that should be public? Email alec.macgillis@propublica.org, or heres how to send tips and documents to ProPublica securely.
For more coverage, read ProPublicas previous reporting on the Trump administration.
Like this story? Sign up for our daily newsletter to get more of our best work.
Alec MacGillis covers politics for ProPublica.
https://twitter.com/AlecMacGillis
Must-read @AlecMacGillis story on Ben Carson at HUD, w special nepotism bonus scenes http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2017/08/ben-carson-hud-secretary.html
Link to tweet
InfoView thread info, including edit history
TrashPut this thread in your Trash Can (My DU » Trash Can)
BookmarkAdd this thread to your Bookmarks (My DU » Bookmarks)
3 replies, 3015 views
ShareGet links to this post and/or share on social media
AlertAlert this post for a rule violation
PowersThere are no powers you can use on this post
EditCannot edit other people's posts
ReplyReply to this post
EditCannot edit other people's posts
Rec (9)
ReplyReply to this post
3 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
A long-harbored conservative dream - the dismantling of the "administrative state" - is taking place (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Aug 2017
OP
enough
(13,266 posts)1. Also at DOE, USDA, EPA, Interior, and State. NT
Turbineguy
(37,386 posts)2. They're only dismantling the parts
that work.