WaPo & NYTimes 'hair on fire' Transition Coverage

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President-elect Donald Trump took to Twitter on Wednesday morning to push back against news coverage describing a chaotic transition to power, saying the process of selecting Cabinet secretaries and working with the Obama administration “is going so smoothly.’’



Trump took particular aim at a favorite target, the New York Times, which reported Wednesday that the transition has been marked by firings and infighting, and that U.S. allies were having trouble reaching Trump at New York’s Trump Tower as he plans his government.

“The failing @nytimes story is so totally wrong on transition. . . . I have received and taken calls from many foreign leaders,’’ Trump wrote in a series of posts on the microblogging site that hosted his numerous incendiary tweets during the presidential campaign. He also denied reports that his transition team has sought security clearances for his children.

In his tweets, Trump falsely implies the Times reported that he had not spoken with foreign leaders and never points out exactly what the Times had in error.
The Times did report that American allies were “blindly dialing in to Trump Tower” in an attempt to reach the president-elect and that key members of the transition team had been fired.
The paper reported that even key U.S. allies such as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and British Prime Minister Theresa May had been patched through to Trump “with little warning,” citing a Western diplomat.

The Washington Post also reported Wednesday about turbulence in Trump’s transition. But Peter Hoekstra, a Republican former congressman from Michigan, defended Trump in an interview Wednesday, saying the president-elect’s team has “a monumental job to do and a short time to do it.”

“I’m just watching all the sniping coming in. They’re not doing this right. They’re not doing that right,’’ said Hoekstra, a former House Intelligence Committee chairman who is reportedly under consideration for CIA director. “This is what any transition team would do. You start with the people who brought you. I think the Trump team is going to expand its outreach, absolutely. But they’re going to do it in a methodical way.’’

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) said Trump’s efforts to work more closely with Russian President Vladi*mir Putin amounted to “complicity in [the] butchery of the Syrian people” and “an unacceptable price for a great nation.”
:rolleyes:
Trump met Tuesday with Vice President-elect Mike Pence, who replaced Christie at the head of the transition Friday, to discuss Cabinet and White House personnel choices. Little to no information was released by the transition office, leaving a clutch of reporters gathered in the lobby of Trump Tower to hustle after team members passing between the front doors and the elevators.

Trump posted a message Tuesday night on Twitter saying that a “very organized process [is] taking place” as he decides on Cabinet and other positions. “I am the only one who knows who the finalists are!”

As he had during the campaign, Trump appeared to be increasingly uncomfortable with outsiders and suspicious of those considered part of what one insider called the *“bicoastal elite,” who are perceived as trying to “insinuate” themselves into positions of power.

Increasingly, among the shards are more mainline Republicans in the national security field. In an angry Twitter post Tuesday, Eliot A. Cohen, a leading voice of opposition to Trump during the campaign who had advised those interested in administration jobs to take them, abruptly changed his mind, saying the transition “will be ugly.”

After responding to a transition insider seeking names of possible appointees, Cohen said, he received what he described as an “unhinged” email from the same person saying “YOU LOST” and accusing Trump critics of trying to infiltrate the administration’s ranks.

“It became clear to me that they view jobs as lollipops, things you give out to good boys and girls, instead of the sense that actually what you’re trying to do is recruit the best possible talent to fill the most important, demanding, *lowest-paying executive jobs in the world,” Cohen said.

Rogers’s departure** coincided with word from Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, whose possible selection as secretary of state comforted more mainline Republicans, that he was unlikely to be chosen. “Has my name been in the mix? I’m pretty sure, yeah. Have I been having intimate conversations? No,” Corker said in an interview. “Do I understand that it’s likely that people who’ve been involved in the center of this for some time, and have been surrogating on television, are likely front-runners? I would say that’s likely, yes.”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...p-table-main_lede-desktop-only:homepage/story

(more at link)
 
so who knows...NYTimes and WaPo were so openly hostile to Trump you have to wonder if ANY of their reportage is true.
I tend to take basic facts as such ( who is in -who is out)but none of their 'reasoning' ( editorializing) behind it.

Rogers has his own problems,and I'm personally glad that Christie the Toad is out.

I willbe very pissed if Rudy gets State. That alarming without the hair on fire coverage
 
so who knows...NYTimes and WaPo were so openly hostile to Trump you have to wonder if ANY of their reportage is true.
I tend to take basic facts as such ( who is in -who is out)but none of their 'reasoning' ( editorializing) behind it.

Rogers has his own problems,and I'm personally glad that Christie the Toad is out.

I willbe very pissed if Rudy gets State. That alarming without the hair on fire coverage

i like guliani :)
 
President-elect Donald Trump took to Twitter on Wednesday morning to push back against news coverage describing a chaotic transition to power, saying the process of selecting Cabinet secretaries and working with the Obama administration “is going so smoothly.’’



Trump took particular aim at a favorite target, the New York Times, which reported Wednesday that the transition has been marked by firings and infighting, and that U.S. allies were having trouble reaching Trump at New York’s Trump Tower as he plans his government.



In his tweets, Trump falsely implies the Times reported that he had not spoken with foreign leaders and never points out exactly what the Times had in error.
The Times did report that American allies were “blindly dialing in to Trump Tower” in an attempt to reach the president-elect and that key members of the transition team had been fired.
The paper reported that even key U.S. allies such as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and British Prime Minister Theresa May had been patched through to Trump “with little warning,” citing a Western diplomat.

The Washington Post also reported Wednesday about turbulence in Trump’s transition. But Peter Hoekstra, a Republican former congressman from Michigan, defended Trump in an interview Wednesday, saying the president-elect’s team has “a monumental job to do and a short time to do it.”

“I’m just watching all the sniping coming in. They’re not doing this right. They’re not doing that right,’’ said Hoekstra, a former House Intelligence Committee chairman who is reportedly under consideration for CIA director. “This is what any transition team would do. You start with the people who brought you. I think the Trump team is going to expand its outreach, absolutely. But they’re going to do it in a methodical way.’’

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) said Trump’s efforts to work more closely with Russian President Vladi*mir Putin amounted to “complicity in [the] butchery of the Syrian people” and “an unacceptable price for a great nation.”
:rolleyes:
Trump met Tuesday with Vice President-elect Mike Pence, who replaced Christie at the head of the transition Friday, to discuss Cabinet and White House personnel choices. Little to no information was released by the transition office, leaving a clutch of reporters gathered in the lobby of Trump Tower to hustle after team members passing between the front doors and the elevators.

Trump posted a message Tuesday night on Twitter saying that a “very organized process [is] taking place” as he decides on Cabinet and other positions. “I am the only one who knows who the finalists are!”

As he had during the campaign, Trump appeared to be increasingly uncomfortable with outsiders and suspicious of those considered part of what one insider called the *“bicoastal elite,” who are perceived as trying to “insinuate” themselves into positions of power.

Increasingly, among the shards are more mainline Republicans in the national security field. In an angry Twitter post Tuesday, Eliot A. Cohen, a leading voice of opposition to Trump during the campaign who had advised those interested in administration jobs to take them, abruptly changed his mind, saying the transition “will be ugly.”

After responding to a transition insider seeking names of possible appointees, Cohen said, he received what he described as an “unhinged” email from the same person saying “YOU LOST” and accusing Trump critics of trying to infiltrate the administration’s ranks.

“It became clear to me that they view jobs as lollipops, things you give out to good boys and girls, instead of the sense that actually what you’re trying to do is recruit the best possible talent to fill the most important, demanding, *lowest-paying executive jobs in the world,” Cohen said.

Rogers’s departure** coincided with word from Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, whose possible selection as secretary of state comforted more mainline Republicans, that he was unlikely to be chosen. “Has my name been in the mix? I’m pretty sure, yeah. Have I been having intimate conversations? No,” Corker said in an interview. “Do I understand that it’s likely that people who’ve been involved in the center of this for some time, and have been surrogating on television, are likely front-runners? I would say that’s likely, yes.”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...p-table-main_lede-desktop-only:homepage/story

(more at link)

Since Trump said it on Tweeter, it must be true.

They're having trouble finding enough people to step forward for the various positions. lol
 
Since Trump said it on Tweeter, it must be true.

They're having trouble finding enough people to step forward for the various positions. lol
it's 10 weeks till Jan 20th.
I don't necessarily believe a Trump tweet anymore then I do a NYTimes meltdown
 
state is forcing other countries to do what we want.
sure. but how do you force them? Do you think a guliani meltdown is gonna work?
You bargain/beg/and plead where needed..mostly you LEAD - something Obama never understood.
 
The media these days is worthless. We've all seen their meltdown over the past year.

The whole idea of a transition team is to have transition. I'm glad Trump doesn't appear to want to keep the same people around just because he put them there in the first place. That would be cronyism...we've had enough of that thank-you. Each of his campaign managers outlived their unique usefulness as the campaign rolled along. He proves to be strong on leadership, not afraid to say at any point, "you're out" and turn to someone else and say, "you're in."
 
he's a freaking grifter. a mindless neocon toad. He'd be a complete disaster.
State is diplomacy/guliani is a hothead.

I think he'd be a fine AG. You need SoS and SoD/NSA to be diplomatic, for sure, but I think RFK is one of the finest AG's we've ever had, and he basically was brash and aggressive at the post, going after the mob/klan/etc. (and SCLC). Granted, RFK possibly got JFK assassinated, if you believe in a conspiracy, due to the way he served as AG...
 
I think he'd be a fine AG. You need SoS and SoD/NSA to be diplomatic, for sure, but I think RFK is one of the finest AG's we've ever had, and he basically was brash and aggressive at the post, going after the mob/klan/etc. (and SCLC). Granted, RFK possibly got JFK assassinated, if you believe in a conspiracy, due to the way he served as AG...

dont democrats like you support the klan comrade peanut?
 
it's 10 weeks till Jan 20th.
I don't necessarily believe a Trump tweet anymore then I do a NYTimes meltdown
Didn't it take well over a year for Obama to fill all the positions in his admin. I think much of the problem is you don't have senior civil servants, who occupy permanent positions, like we have over here. It seems totally ludicrous that so many positions have to filled by a new admin.

Sent from my Lenovo K52e78 using Tapatalk
 
I think he'd be a fine AG. You need SoS and SoD/NSA to be diplomatic, for sure, but I think RFK is one of the finest AG's we've ever had, and he basically was brash and aggressive at the post, going after the mob/klan/etc. (and SCLC). Granted, RFK possibly got JFK assassinated, if you believe in a conspiracy, due to the way he served as AG...
Yes there is that small matter, but it probably cost him his life as well.

Sent from my Lenovo K52e78 using Tapatalk
 
https://presidentialtransition.usa.gov/2015/09/23/plum-book/






Federal Government Structure
Government Ethics
Transition Overview
Records Management Guidelines
External Transition Resources
Plum Book
Plum Book | PDF Version | Mobile Version
Every four years, just after the Presidential election, the “United States Government Policy and Supporting Positions,” commonly known as the Plum Book, is published, alternately, by the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs and the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
This publication contains data (as of June 30, 2012) on over 8,000 Federal civil service leadership and support positions in the legislative and executive branches of the Federal Government that may be subject to noncompetitive appointment (e.g., positions such as agency heads and their immediate subordinates, policy executives and advisors, and aides who report to these officials). The duties of many such positions may involve advocacy of Administration policies and programs and the incumbents usually have a close and confidential working relationship with the agency head or other key officials.
Following are the major categories of positions listed:
Executive Schedule and salary-equivalent positions paid at the rates established for levels I through V of the Executive Schedule;
Senior Executive Service (SES) “General” positions;
Senior Foreign Service positions;
Schedule C positions excepted from the competitive service by the President, or by the Director, Office of Personnel Management, because of the confidential or policy-determining nature of the position duties; and
Other positions at the GS-14 and above level excepted from the competitive civil service by law because of the confidential or policy-determining nature of the position duties.
See Appendix 2 for more details on SES appointments and Appendix 3 for more details on Schedule C appointments. Additional information on the positions listed and the Federal salary schedules under which they are paid is provided in the appendices. The Legend on the following page shows the codes and acronyms used in this publication.
 
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/GPO-PLUMBOOK-2012/content-detail.html




United States Government Policy and Supporting Positions (Plum Book), 2012

Every four years, just after the Presidential election, the United States Government Policy and Supporting Positions, commonly known as the Plum Book, is published, alternately, by the Senate and the House. The Plum Book is used to identify presidentially appointed positions within the Federal Government.


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Publication Title
United States Government Policy and Supporting Positions (Plum Book), 2012
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Congressional Committee Materials
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United States Government Policy and Supporting Positions (Plum Book)
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December 1, 2012
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112th Congress, 2nd Session
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United States Government Policy and Supporting Positions (Plum Book), 2012
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Appendices
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1. Summary of Positions Subject to Noncompetitive Appointment
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2. Senior Executive Service
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3. Schedule C Positions
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4. Federal Salary Schedules for 2012
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5. Office of the Vice President
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*
 
Didn't it take well over a year for Obama to fill all the positions in his admin. I think much of the problem is you don't have senior civil servants, who occupy permanent positions, like we have over here. It seems totally ludicrous that so many positions have to filled by a new admin.

Sent from my Lenovo K52e78 using Tapatalk

when you hire guliani for like sec of state he also brings some of his own people with him. Same for other postitions so it gets filled fast.
 
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