For liberals, this is all proof that Trump was being disingenuous all along. He has little interest in draining the swamp and just fooled naive voters. But how does it look from Trump Tower? And how might Trump supporters react?
First, let’s back up a bit. Every administration comes in promising to clean up Washington in one way or another. How could they not? It’s good politics to rail against corruption. But those promises often run into friction once the candidates actually win. Take Barack Obama, who campaigned vigorously in 2008 on changing the way business was done in Washington. He didn’t just adopt it as a mantra in the final weeks of the campaign, like Trump. He was talking about shutting the “revolving door” between industry and government as far back as 2007. Not so much. The Obama administration deserves credit for ethical behavior—it’s been an unusually scandal-free White House—but the revolving door has hardly slowed.
This probably isn’t because someone made a conscious decision to abandon anti-corruption. It’s because the path-dependencies in any system as big as government are strong, and it’s much easier to tinker with the rules around the edges than it is rework the system—especially if you’d rather get other things done, instead of waging an all-out war with the people who depend on the status quo for their livelihood.
The Trump camp may not even see these moves as compromising. Trump argued throughout the campaign that his wealth actually shielded him from corruption, so it stands to reason that he’d think that other billionaires would be similarly inured to conflicts of interest, even though in reality they stand to profit and will likely to do so. In 1953, President Eisenhower nominated Charles Erwin Wilson, the former CEO of General Motors, as secretary of defense. During his confirmation hearings, senators pressed him on whether his stock in GM presented a conflict, since the company was a major Pentagon contractor. According to popular legend, Wilson replied, “What’s good for General Motors is good for the country.”
What Wilson actually said was more revealing: “For years I thought what was good for our country was good for General Motors, and vice versa.” In other words, he wasn’t saying he’d help GM, and that would in turn help the U.S.; instead, he couldn’t possibly see any way that the two interests would diverge. This fallacy probably afflicts Trump as well.
Whether Trump’s supporters will be willing to buy it is a different question. Former U.S. Representative Joe Walsh has developed an amusing coterie of fans on the left for his critiques of Trump. Walsh has been particularly upset about the appointments of former Goldman Sachs staffers. As for the greater mass of Trump backers, there is reason to believe they may let the president-elect off the hook, and that reason is negative partisanship. First, many people likely heard the “drain the swamp” rhetoric not as a program of good government, but as a broadside against Hillary Clinton. With Clinton vanquished, who cares? (The “lock her up” chants have faded, somewhat, as well.) Second, they will now be more willing to overlook Trump’s own shortcomings because they still detest his opponents.
As gobsmacking as Gingrich’s suggestion that tackling corruption is un-presidential seems at first glance, there’s a wisdom to it. Bashing corruption is a good tactic for candidates, and voters gravitate to it as well. But once the votes are cast, both groups often find it’s better to just set that rhetoric aside and get down to the work of governing—even if gets some people’s hands a little grubby.