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DOGE

No One Cares When Presidential Advisers Want Bigger Government

Elon Musk's vague White House role is only controversial because he's trying to slash bureaucracy.

Christian Britschgi | 2.26.2025 5:00 PM

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Elon Musk and Donald Trump in the Oval Office | CNP/AdMedia/Newscom
(CNP/AdMedia/Newscom)

Elon Musk's unclear position on the federal government's organization chart continues to generate controversy and legal problems for the Trump administration.

Despite being the seemingly powerful, very public face of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), with the full backing of President Donald Trump, the administration's lawyers claim in various court filings that Musk has no official role in either of the White House units bearing the DOGE label.

Instead, as Reason's Jacob Sullum explained yesterday, they say that Musk is officially just a senior adviser to Trump within the White House office.

Opponents of DOGE have seized on Musk's unclear White House role to file lawsuits challenging DOGE's authority to access government data, shrink federal staff, and reorganize federal departments.

A collection of Democratic attorney generals even filed a lawsuit claiming that Musk's role within the federal government is unconstitutional, as his vast apparent powers show him to be not an adviser but a principal officer who needs Senate confirmation.

DOGE critics in the media have claimed that Musk has appointed himself as a "dictator" and that he's currently staging a coup within the federal government.

Yet, Musk is hardly the first White House adviser to have great influence over government policy. His advisory role is only causing problems because DOGE's mission involves telling government workers what to do instead of bossing around private citizens and companies.

Contrast the uproar about Musk's position within the government to the appointment of Andy Slavitt as a senior White House adviser on President Joe Biden's COVID-19 response task force.

Slavitt, somewhat ironically, initially entered government as part of the Obama administration team fixing the rollout of Healthcare.gov. That effort spawned the U.S. Digital Service, which has since been converted into the U.S. DOGE Service under Trump.

Slavitt's return to government as a non-Senate confirmed adviser proved totally uncontroversial and remained so throughout his six-month tenure.

That's to be expected. Everyone understood then that presidents can appoint advisers who can influence policy and even take the lead on announcing government policy changes to the public.

Slavitt did just that. He frequently led press conferences relaying new Biden policy initiatives like using the Defense Production Act to increase vaccine and test production or increasing the prices Medicare and Medicaid would pay for vaccine doses.

His leading public-facing role on the administration's vaccine drive proved uncontroversial even though that "whole of government effort" dominated the first months of Biden's term and involved spending a lot of taxpayer money, imposing mandatory vaccine data reporting requirements on private providers, and eventually vaccine mandates on private healthcare workers and employees of large companies.  (Those latter mandates were issued after Slavitt left the White House.)

Granted, Slavitt did not generate any intra-agency confusion or anger government employee unions by sending out mass emails asking federal workers what they did that week.

The private companies that received his emails demanding they censor the speech of private citizens were crystal clear about his authority and role in the White House.

As detailed in a Congressional investigation released in May 2024 by House Republicans, Slavitt was one of the primary Biden administration officials responsible for "jawboning" Facebook and Amazon to censor anti-vaccine and COVID-related content.

In emails and "furious" calls to Facebook's Nick Clegg, Slavitt expressed the administration's displeasure that the company hadn't removed anti-vaccine memes and even seemed to threaten policy retaliation if it didn't adopt stricter moderation policies.

Slavitt was also one of the administration officials who pressured Amazon to remove anti-vaccine books from its online store and criticized the company's policy of attaching Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) vaccine information to listings of anti-vaccine books as "not a great solution."

Both companies went to great lengths to placate Slavitt's censorship demands.

The Trump administration has certainly been vague about DOGE's precise powers and personnel. This has arguably undermined its drive to slash the federal bureaucracy and root out wasteful spending.

When DOGE teams have demanded access to government record systems or when emails go out offering federal employees severance pay in exchange for resigning, government workers have been able to stymie these efforts by pointing to the unclear authority behind them.

In contrast, the Biden administration was generally a lot better about crossing 't's and dotting 'i's on its various executive initiatives. That made its advisers' job of unconstitutionally censoring the speech of ordinary Americans a lot more effective.

But it's the target of executive actions, and not internal procedure and clarity, that matter.

It's much more concerning when a White House senior adviser demands that individual Facebook posts come down than when another White House senior adviser demands individual emails be sent, even though the latter's adviser's precise role is a little hazier.

Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.

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NEXT: Why Do 36 Percent of Americans Have a Positive View of Socialism?

Christian Britschgi is a reporter at Reason.

DOGEElon MuskDonald TrumpConstitutionFree SpeechCOVID-19
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  1. Sarah Palin's Buttplug - Jan 6 = 9/11 (same motive)   3 months ago

    Does Fatass Donnie still call Elon “Leon”?

    Just aksing.

    1. Don’t get eliminated   3 months ago

      You were banned for posting a link to kiddie porn.

    2. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 months ago

      How's the coping going?

      1. Fats of Fury   3 months ago

        He's got his eye on Lil x.

    3. Mother's Lament - Buttplug = Neocons (same motive)   3 months ago

      So sorry that this is happening to you, Shrike. And you were counting on that sweet, sweet USAID cash continuing so that Open Society would give you your old job back.
      I'd say ask Jeff or Tony for a reference, but their jobs with Media Matters are probably on the line too.

    4. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   3 months ago

      turd, the ass-clown of the commentariat, lies; it’s all he ever does. turd is a kiddie diddler, and a pathological liar, entirely too stupid to remember which lies he posted even minutes ago, and also too stupid to understand we all know he’s a liar.
      If anything he posts isn’t a lie, it’s totally accidental.
      turd lies; it’s what he does. turd is a lying pile of lefty shit.

    5. Fire up the Woodchippers! (Trump Ascendant!! )   3 months ago

      Won’t it be good when your Soros masters are locked up in federal prison?

      1. Vernon Depner   3 months ago

        That wouldn't work. The lizard people would just teleport them out.

  2. JFree   3 months ago

    It doesn't matter one tinkers damn whether a Presidential advisor favors big govt or small govt. It is Congress that creates executive departments and Congress that funds them. Congress that creates the duties of the office. The oath of office is I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter

    It is also therefore Congress that can eliminate departments and defund them.

    What is not a surprise is that 'small government' types have virtually no interest in getting those views into Congress - and getting the opposite (corrupt, cronyist, entrenched) views out of Congress.

    1. JesseAz (mean girl ambassador)   3 months ago

      Where does it say congress micromanage the executive? Make hiring and firing decisions? Forces spending of every penny allocated? Gives congress the power to modify article 2?

      1. Don’t get eliminated   3 months ago

        Leftists don’t need facts to support their assertions.

        1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 months ago

          Especially not consistent facts.

      2. JFree   3 months ago

        Gives congress the power to modify article 2?

        Congress doesn't have to modify Art2. Congress' authority is directly IN Art 2 Sec 2. And indirectly in the Oath of Office - which is constitutionally required and specifically worded for Prez - faithfully execute. That does not mean listen to what God orders. It does not mean listen to your voting base. It does not mean do whatever the fuck you want to do. It does not mean do whatever SC justices say to do. It means follow the law. And the law - legislation - is what creates/eliminates functions, funds/defunds them, and details which committees will oversee it to decide what/how future legislation will adapt to reality..

        If Congress chooses to have detailed instructions as to how the law will be executed, that is Congress' authority - though they do NOT have the authority to hire/fire (vest the appointment) of individuals directly. They must delegate execution to the executive. If they choose to give leeway, that is also their authority and the executive branch - and the specific dept to which that leeway is delegated - then has the leeway to faithfully execute. Only if/when Congress says 'Do whatever the fuck you want to do', will the executive have that authority. It is CONGRESS that can limit government. It is CONGRESS that can define its enumerated powers narrowly.

        You clowns spend no effort electing critters to Congress. When an actual libertarian is elected (from another district), you dismiss them because you prefer a dictator to bring liberty. You spend no effort trying to reduce spending because you think tax cuts and deficit spending are a substitute. You spend no effort forcing Congress to reform itself so that it can reduce spending. You all are fucking worthless.

        And you can't even read the Constitution that you stick on a pedestal to worship..

        1. Don’t get eliminated   3 months ago

          "When an actual libertarian is elected (from another district), you dismiss them because you prefer a dictator to bring liberty."

          I don't recall seeing Massie or Paul being dismissed here?

        2. sarcasmic   3 months ago

          Trump said something along the lines of “I’ve got an article two and that means I can do anything I want.”

          So that’s what Jesse has to defend.

          And does with fallacies.

          1. Mother's Lament - Buttplug = Neocons (same motive)   3 months ago

            Fuck off you shitty drunken retard troll. You didn't even read what they were talking about I bet.

        3. JesseAz (mean girl ambassador)   3 months ago

          Faithfully execute is under article 2, not article 1. It does not say faithfully executed as Congress demands you fucking retard.

          In article one there are few controls over article 2.

          Advice and consent.
          Oversight (power of subpeona)
          Appropriation of funds.
          Impeachment

          No where does it define congress sets the means of execution. The power is vested in the executive.

          How are you so fucking dumb?

          You can even see the intention in the Federalist papers. Maybe read those instead of watching Maddow?

          As for liberty, you have no fucking clue what liberty is dumbass fascist fuck. You defended all the covid authoritarianism, well extended pass the powers granted to the federal government.

          The entirety of your analysis is what grants democrats the most fascist control.

          Some of us have actually read and studied the founding. You just repeat retarded narratives that have one consistency, expanding government power for Democrats.

          It works on other maddow viewers like sarc. But not on educated people.

          1. JesseAz (mean girl ambassador)   3 months ago

            It is amazing watching sarc and jewfree believe the executive is a glorified congressional secretary lol.

            Despite w recent USSC decisions stating clearly the executive power is vested in the executive, not congress, they persist.

            Fucking amazing.

          2. JesseAz (mean girl ambassador)   3 months ago

            Let's use an appeal to ridicule for jewfrees belief system of the government.

            Congress pass a law to create wormhole technology using Legos for 1k. Jewfree would say the executive is bound to complete this task.

            Congress passes a law saying Garland is the forever head of the DoJ. Jewfree says this is constitutional.

            Congress passes a law that all executive employees have to pledge allegiance to Barack Obama. Welp, executive can't do anything so they have to.

            Congress passes a bill saying the presidential decisions have to be approved by AOC before they are executed. Executive is at their mercy.

            Jewfree is a fucking moron.

          3. chemjeff radical individualist   3 months ago

            As for liberty,

            JFree is right. You and your team want your version of Pinochet, an authoritarian dictator to force 'liberty' onto people. NO, Trump is not a dictator! But every time he starts acting like one, you applaud it.

            You don't want liberty. You want power, and you want control, and you want victory.

            1. Don’t get eliminated   3 months ago

              Hey Lying Jeffy, still trying to get your opinion on this?

              https://reason.com/2025/02/14/j-d-vance-brings-the-culture-war-to-europe-there-is-a-new-sheriff-in-town/?comments=true#comment-10917697

            2. Incunabulum   3 months ago

              OK? So what if we do?

              You wanted Biden as dictator.

              We want a different dictator. We're no different than you.

              1. TrickyVic (old school)   3 months ago

                How about no dictators?

            3. DesigNate   3 months ago

              “Sec. 2. Rescinding Unlawful Regulations and Regulations That Undermine the National Interest. (a) Agency heads shall, in coordination with their DOGE Team Leads and the Director of the Office of Management and Budget, initiate a process to review all regulations subject to their sole or joint jurisdiction for consistency with law and Administration policy. Within 60 days of the date of this order, agency heads shall, in consultation with the Attorney General as appropriate, identify the following classes of regulations:
              (i) unconstitutional regulations and regulations that raise serious constitutional difficulties, such as exceeding the scope of the power vested in the Federal Government by the Constitution;
              (ii) regulations that are based on unlawful delegations of legislative power;
              (iii) regulations that are based on anything other than the best reading of the underlying statutory authority or prohibition;
              (iv) regulations that implicate matters of social, political, or economic significance that are not authorized by clear statutory authority;
              (v) regulations that impose significant costs upon private parties that are not outweighed by public benefits;
              (vi) regulations that harm the national interest by significantly and unjustifiably impeding technological innovation, infrastructure development, disaster response, inflation reduction, research and development, economic development, energy production, land use, and foreign policy objectives; and
              (vii) regulations that impose undue burdens on small business and impede private enterprise and entrepreneurship.”

              This is totes dictatorial and not something that should have happened 40 years ago.

    2. Incunabulum   3 months ago

      Trump and his principle executive officers are ensuring their agencies are faithfully discharging their congressionally mandated roles.

      You're just upset the Deep-state-Democratic Party-NGO nexus - which is not a congressionally mandated role for these agencies - is being disrupted.

      You're concerned the terrorists won't be getting their cash and loot so they can kill juice.

    3. Thoritsu   3 months ago

      If Congress's role is so clear, why are cases like Chevron going to SCOTUS. Get you head out of your ass.

      Yes, an act of Congress can set up and separately, annually fund an Executive department. HOWEVER, the number of employees is NOT set by Congress. The details on spending the money are NOT set by Congress. The manner of execution is NOT set by Congress.

      The Executive has wide authority to execute what is defined in law.

      Where do you think PresBudget starts? Salaries of government employees. Get rid of them, and you have a lasting, real, government reduction. Fewer parasites getting paid. Fewer parasites burdening the people with regulation and force. Fewer parasites figuring out how to get more parasites in their group. This is real government reduction. It is in the Executive's authority, and it is genius...if you are a Libertarian.

  3. But SkyNet is a Private Company   3 months ago

    BRITCHES!
    Outstanding, your best work yet.

    We could also look back at Anita Dunn, Valerie Jarrett, Dick Morris, Karl Rove, David Gergen, Sid Blumenthal, Neera Tanden, David Axerlrod, etc etc

    1. mad.casual   3 months ago

      Don't forget James Carville! [Quaffs deeply of tear-filled stein] Oh, yeah, that's the stuff.

    2. Gaear Grimsrud   3 months ago

      Sister Christian now your time has come.

      1. Don’t get eliminated   3 months ago

        You're motoring!

    3. Chipper Chunked Chile Con Congress (ex NCW)   3 months ago

      I'm kinda shocked that Britches remembered he's supposed to be writing for a libertarian publication. But yes, well done.

  4. BigT   3 months ago

    Easy solution: Trump requisitions all the records to his office and simply lets the DOGE kids go through them.

    Any dept folks who don’t comply get sent to an office in Alaska or central Mississippi.

    1. Thoritsu   3 months ago

      Perfect!

  5. Don’t get eliminated   3 months ago

    The internal fight at Reason continues. Welcome to the good side Britches.

    1. Wizzle Bizzle   3 months ago

      Yeah, gonna be a frosty night at the company Christmas party. Lucky for you, Gillespie et al will be out of their hive-mind on LSD, so you can sneak out pretty much whenever you want to.

      1. Don’t get eliminated   3 months ago

        The Jacket is well above our petty squabbles.

        1. Mother's Lament - Buttplug = Neocons (same motive)   3 months ago

          Goth Fonzie sees all and knows all.

  6. mad.casual   3 months ago

    Let us also not forget that the "duly appointed" chief medical adviser to the President from 2021-2022 is also the person who effectively financed the illegal research that led to the pandemic and is also the researcher that botched the information campaign at the start of the HIV epidemic and spread around a bunch of PEPFAR money to 'make up for it'.

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   3 months ago

      You could get a votive candle with his grinning mug on it not long ago.

  7. JesseAz (mean girl ambassador)   3 months ago

    Anyone placing odds on if Reason discusses Romania arresting the vote leader of the election last year?

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   3 months ago

      I think Liz kinda went there a couple days ago before the shit really got real. The question is how does it affect Koch industries.

      1. Don’t get eliminated   3 months ago

        I heard there was weapons being smuggled from Pakistan through Romani but I have no idea if that is true, or if it has anything to do with Koch industries. I just thought this would be an interesting place to post this totally unfounded rumor.

        1. Mother's Lament - Buttplug = Neocons (same motive)   3 months ago

          Given the track record of unfounded rumors since 2016, I'd say that there's a good chance it is.

    2. Chipper Chunked Chile Con Congress (ex NCW)   3 months ago

      Or flat out reversing an election, and what that means. I know it got mentioned but that's hardly the same.

  8. Rise of the Impedance   3 months ago

    Elon Musk's vague White House role is only controversial because he's trying to slash bureaucracy.

    Yeah, that has to be it. Not because of conflicts that would embarrass Bernie Madoff. Rewrote company timelines to make him the founder, yet never started a profitable company in his life. Constant "Pump and Dump" lies and over-hypes, requiring him to snuggling up to Trump's asshole to stay out of prison. Relishes in the though of firing and playing mind games with people. Throwing USA's good-will to China and whoever for no reason. Want to root around on the gov't payments just because he can. No plan, no accountability, just play-time-with-the-government.
    Yep, he's just trying to slash bureaucracy. That's why he's "controversial".

    1. Fats of Fury   3 months ago

      So what were the 5 or so things you did last week?

      1. Gaear Grimsrud   3 months ago

        I'm guessing it involved cutting and pasting lefty talking points.

        1. Don’t get eliminated   3 months ago

          Haha beat me to it.

    2. Don’t get eliminated   3 months ago

      Chatgpt, please make a post of leftist talking points against Elon.

    3. Mother's Lament - Buttplug = Neocons (same motive)   3 months ago

      You just know this post is Buttplug trying to hide his writing style and failing.

      yet never started a profitable company in his life

      Hahahahahaha... whew. The worlds richest man who runs the world's most advanced and successful rocket company, who owns the world's most successful electric car company, who owns the world's most successful brain chip maker, who founded Paypal, who sent up Starlink, who created the world's most advanced tunneling company, etc, etc, and you're trying to gaslight us into believing he's just some used car salesman.

      You're so fucking retarded, Shrike.

      1. n00bdragon   3 months ago

        Musk didn't found PayPal. Tesla is entirely dependent on government subsidies to forge the illusion of profitability. None of those other statements have anything to do with profitability.

        1. Vernon Depner   3 months ago

          Tesla is entirely dependent on government subsidies to forge the illusion of profitability..

          That's true of the entire electric car industry.

        2. Minadin   3 months ago

          I thought Tesla was excluded from the EV rebates by the Biden Administration, because they are non-union.

        3. JesseAz (mean girl ambassador)   3 months ago

          And yet GM and Ford with the same subsidies lost billions.

        4. Rise of the Impedance   3 months ago

          <Musk didn't found PayPal.
          Nor did he found Tesla or have anything to do with the original engineering. He re-wrote the company history to make himself a 'founder' after he became CEO. His design contributions were meddling with the design to increase cost unnecessarily. Tesla is successful in spite of Musk, not because of his.

    4. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   3 months ago

      Reply to Rise of the Impedance:

      Fuck off and die, slimy pile of TDS-addled pile of shit.

    5. Incunabulum   3 months ago

      None of that is a) anything every single Democrat cabinet member hasn't already done or would do if they could, b) not a conflict of interest, and/or c) is actually a negative in our view.

  9. Fats of Fury   3 months ago

    Has the government worker infuriated about the email been identified?

  10. TJJ2000   3 months ago

    "because DOGE's mission involves telling government"
    BINGO....

    Just like Biden pardoned government employees.
    The "Deep State" 'swamp' is real.
    Just as it was during Trumps 1st Administration.

  11. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   3 months ago

    "Elon Musk's vague White House role is only controversial because he's trying to slash bureaucracy.

    Correct. The whining is limited to those opposed to the result. Any claims of legal relevancy so far have proven to the lefty shit-speak.

  12. Fats of Fury   3 months ago

    About time Harvard paid it's fair share.

    https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2025/2/11/increasing-endowment-tax-preview/

    1. Chipper Chunked Chile Con Congress (ex NCW)   3 months ago

      That article is so weird! I thought people at Harvard liked taxes!

  13. Incunabulum   3 months ago

    Britches, you're going to get fired if you keep interjecting any sort of sense into the TDS feed. You and Wolfe are on thin ice;)

    1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   3 months ago

      ^+1

  14. MollyGodiva   3 months ago

    It is absurd to say that there has ever been someone in the US government like Musk. He wields power without any regard to federal law. It is unclear if Trump is even in charge anymore, or if he ever was. Musk does not care about saving money or making the government more efficient. He is wrecking the federal government and sabotaging it's functions. I know there are many here who cheer for this, but this will hurt them as well.

    The US has fallen as a free country. Freedom is based on the ability of the population to chose those who make the laws on their behalf. Consent of the governed. My violating federal law as Musk is doing, he is neutralizing Congress, and thus severs the ties between voters and those who make the laws. Some compare this to fascism and some to the gilded age, but either way it will end very badly for Americans.

    1. Don't look at me! (No longer muted!)   3 months ago

      HA HA HA HA HA

    2. But SkyNet is a Private Company   3 months ago

      Can you fvcking read?

    3. Fire up the Woodchippers! (Trump Ascendant!! )   3 months ago

      Tony, for a raving faggot, you are one dumb cunt.

    4. Vernon Depner   3 months ago

      It is absurd to say that there has ever been someone in the US government like Musk.

      I'll see you and raise you Edith Wilson.

    5. TJJ2000   3 months ago

      "Freedom is based on the ability of the population to chose those who make the laws on their behalf."

      100% WRONG.
      [WE] mob RULERS does NOT make freedom. (Leftard indoctrinated stupidity 101)

      A Supreme Law that LIMITS the [WE] mob RULERS makes Individual Freedom.

      And that is EXACTLY why many here cheer for the wrecking of the [Na]tional So[zi]alist Empire and sabotaging it's UN-Constitutional functions.

      Seriously. How diluted does a person have to get to think a popularity contest somehow ensure their Freedom??

    6. Bladernr1001   3 months ago

      Untrue....probably one of the best examples is when Bill Clinton enlisted his wife Hillary to spearhead an initiative to create a single payer health care system back in the 90's.

      Pretty every past president had ad hock advisors.....read.

      https://townhall.com/columnists/anncoulter/2025/02/19/columnistsanncoulter20250219musks-attack-on-waste-fraud-and-abuse-threatens-status-quo-n2652512

      1. TrickyVic (old school)   3 months ago

        That's what I was thinking when I posted below.

    7. TrickyVic (old school)   3 months ago

      Musk has as much constitutional authority as the first lady does.

      Either zero, or if you believe the president decides then they are covered.

  15. VinniUSMC   3 months ago

    Bureaucracy dies in daylight.

    1. Chipper Chunked Chile Con Congress (ex NCW)   3 months ago

      <3

  16. Marshal   3 months ago

    sarc: But they were Democrats so it was ok!

  17. Heraclitus   3 months ago

    Nice bit of both-sidsing. Is it that hard to come up with article ideas over at Reason these days?

    Slavitt had a pretty well-defined goal - deal with Covid. You know, a pandemic. But Musk? Not only does his role step on the toes of congress and statutes, but he is not equipped to do it. He doesn't understand how government works. Period. Add to that the conflict of interest and it seems like a joke that Reason would make this inane comparison.

    The what-did-you-do last week email is a good example of how ill-equipped Musk is. What was the goal of that project? Is it to determine if you are dead as he seems to say? Then just go through the org charts, figure out who the supervisors are and tell them to prove their employees are real. Also, there are performance reviews and all that that any HR database contains. Besides, who is going to go through each response and analyze it? Will he create a para-HR system to do this, one that overrides the supervisors? This makes little sense. It was a rash, impulsive email that demonstrates Musk's (and Trump's) limitations.

    1. mr simple   3 months ago

      Lol, this is not how "both sides" arguments work. Your straw man lack-of-understanding arguments are equally ridiculous. Just because you can pretend not to know what's happening doesn't make the action invalid. You midwits keep flailing about trying to find a cogent argument against this and failing miserably.

      1. Muzzled Woodchipper   3 months ago

        Because there is no cogent argument against a president having an advisor.

        Every president has had one (or dozens), and, as author notes, the only reason anyone cares is because DOGE is goring their sacred cows. It was bound to happen. Democrats singular reasoning for any action over the last 10 years has been to oppose Trump no matter the issue. They’ve painted themselves in a corner, and want to blame Trump for it.

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