logo
Opinion - How deep does loyalty run in Washington?

Opinion - How deep does loyalty run in Washington?

Yahoo12-06-2025
President Harry S. Truman is often credited for saying: 'If you want a friend in Washington, get a dog.' He never said that, though. And he was once given a dog (Feller), but his wife, Bess, would not let him keep it at the White House. His physician became its keeper.
There is a popular notion abroad in the land that politicians have few real friends, and that what friendships there are in the nation's capital are fleeting and unreliable. The very noisy, nasty feud that broke out last week between Elon Musk and President Trump only reinforced that stereotype. Musk may have once referred to his relationship with Trump as 'first buddy,' but it became clear with the breakup that this was no Butch and Sundance buddy flick. It was more like an Incredible Hulk-Terminator faceoff.
What purportedly set Musk off was his belated discovery that the One Big Beautiful Bill Act didn't actually reduce the deficit, it increases it by $2.5 trillion over the next decade. His new mantra became, 'Kill the bill,' and he vowed to defeat anyone who voted for it, to form a new independent party, hinted at Trump's impeachment, and suggested that Trump appears in the files on convicted sex-offender Jeffrey Epstein. The first set of government files were partially released by Attorney General Pam Bondi on Feb. 27. Musk has subsequently deleted his X-posts on impeachment and Epstein, perhaps signaling a thaw.
Trump responded in their exchange of vicious social media blasts by threatening to defund Musk's lucrative government space contracts and suggesting Musk had 'lost his mind.' He said what really set Musk off was the loss of government subsidies for electric vehicles like Tesla.
Is their swift falling-out proof that there are no real friendships or loyalty forged in Washington? Probably not. Their case is atypical. It is more an example of two very rich, powerful, and highly competitive egos thrashing it out for attention and primacy. That's hardly sound grounding for the growth of genuine friendships, let alone lasting loyalty, whether in Washington or anywhere else.
The Trump-Musk fissure does raise the issue of whether loyalty is less possible and more volatile in a political environment where winning is often described as everything. Think of the parade of officials who fell-out with the White House in Trump's first administration, like Michael Flynn, Rex Tillerson, John Kelly, James Mattis, H.R. McMaster, John Bolton, Nikki Haley and others.
Or take former President Biden's crowd that either kept mum, covered-up, or remained in denial over his decline in mental acuity. Biden's former press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre is the most recent example, declaring her party switch to Independent with the publication of her book, 'Independent: A Look Inside a Broken White House, Outside the Party Lines.'
No party or president has a monopoly on the disillusioned who either resign or are fired. It happens frequently to those whose first loyalty is to the Constitution and not their president. This phenomenon is most visible at the White House or Cabinet levels where the stakes are the highest and the struggles for power are often the most vicious.
Members of Congress come and go with election defeats, retirements and aspirations for higher office. But their former top staffers usually stay on and move to work for other members. When Hill staff wear out, they sometimes move on to jobs as lobbyists, with think tanks, or in academia, again, all the time widening their circle of close friends.
Those who want to exploit their past glories and positions of power for fame and fortune as media stars or sensational book authors have very short half-lives, and their circle of former friends often shrinks.
What does all this have to do with the Trump-Musk super feud? Not a whole lot. They go their separate ways, continuing to amass power, with any allusions to past friendships and loyalty losing any relevance. There's not much there that average citizens can identify with or even care about, other than for its pure entertainment value.
Trump is the only president in a century who has not had a dog while in office. An August 2018 Newsweek story, 'Trump doesn't like dogs and dogs don't like him,' quotes his first ex-wife Ivana from her memoir, 'Donald was not a dog fan.' He certainly didn't take to her pet poodle, Chappie, and vice versa. We don't know how many actual friends he has, but one thing that remains constant over time is that the presidency is probably still the loneliest job in town.
Don Wolfensberger is a 28-year congressional staff veteran culminating as chief-of-staff of the House Rules Committee in 1995. He is author of, 'Congress and the People: Deliberative Democracy on Trial' (2000), and, 'Changing Cultures in Congress: From Fair Play to Power Plays' (2018).
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Thune vows to 'grind down' Democrats as Trump's nominees face 'unprecedented' Senate obstruction
Thune vows to 'grind down' Democrats as Trump's nominees face 'unprecedented' Senate obstruction

Fox News

timea few seconds ago

  • Fox News

Thune vows to 'grind down' Democrats as Trump's nominees face 'unprecedented' Senate obstruction

The Senate's top Republican is voicing mounting frustration with Democrats for stalling President Donald Trump's civilian nominees, something Senate Majority Leader John Thune called "unprecedented." "This is the first president in history who has never had, at this point in his presidency, a civilian nominee approved either by unanimous consent or voice vote in the Senate," Thune said Thursday during an interview on the "Brian Kilmeade Show" on Fox News Radio. The stalled nominations include undersecretaries for major federal departments such as Education, Labor and Agriculture, along with judges and ambassadors. Thune accused Senate Democrats of "delaying, obstructing, [and] blocking" the confirmation process at nearly every step, leading to significant slowdowns. As frustrations grow, Thune said he's not ruling out canceling the Senate's August recess to push through key confirmations, something President Trump has put pressure on Thune to do. "As we head into the August break we need to get a whole bunch more confirmed, and we intend to do that," he said, adding that his strategy is to "wear them down," referring to his Democratic colleagues. "Because of the way the Democrats are playing in their Trump Derangement Syndrome, they're putting up an unprecedented level of obstruction," he added. "I think the only way to beat that is to just grind them down." President Trump echoed those sentiments on Truth Social. He urged the Senate to remain in session through the upcoming break. "Hopefully the very talented John Thune, fresh off our many victories over the past two weeks and, indeed, 6 months, will cancel August recess (and long weekends!), in order to get my incredible nominees confirmed," Trump wrote last week. "We need them badly!!!" Responding to the president's post, Thune said he understands the White House's urgency. "I totally appreciate the president's frustration with what's happening on the nominee front," he told Kilmeade. Still, he noted that the confirmation rate under Trump's second term is roughly double what it was during his first, and ahead of where President Joe Biden stood at the same point in his presidency. However, Thune argued that Democrats are making the process harder than it needs to be. "There's nothing about this that is easy, but it should be a lot easier than it is," he said, arguing there's a benefit to having lawmakers return to their home state and constituents. Earlier this month, tensions between lawmakers hit a breaking point when Democrats walked out of a Judiciary Committee meeting in protest of Trump nominees Emil Bove for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and Jeanine Pirro for U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia. Sen. Dick Durbin claimed that some Democrats were denied the chance to speak, leading to the walkout. "Today, Chairman Grassley blocked Democratic members from discussing the controversial records of nominees like Emil Bove and Jeanine Pirro, shut down debate, and forced votes for no apparent reason," Durbin said in part. "My question is this: what are my Senate Republican colleagues trying to hide?" Earlier this year, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer supported a strategy to delay all of President Trump's Cabinet nominees who didn't have full, unanimous support in the Senate. He also used a chamber procedural move to stall some federal prosecutors in committee.

Scoop: Trump ally to launch key battleground state campaign in bid to flip Democrat-held Senate seat
Scoop: Trump ally to launch key battleground state campaign in bid to flip Democrat-held Senate seat

Fox News

timea few seconds ago

  • Fox News

Scoop: Trump ally to launch key battleground state campaign in bid to flip Democrat-held Senate seat

FIRST ON FOX: Republican Rep. Mike Collins will announce a campaign for the U.S. senate in battleground Georgia early next week, sources with knowledge told Fox News on Friday. Collins is aiming to challenge Democrat Sen. Jon Ossoff, who is running for re-election in the key southeastern battleground state that President Donald Trump narrowly carried in last year's election. The GOP views Ossoff as the most vulnerable Democrat seeking re-election in the Senate in next year's midterm elections. Collins, a businessman who founded a trucking company, is in his second term representing Georgia's 10th Congressional District, which includes a large swath of urban, suburban, and rural areas between Atlanta and Augusta. The conservative lawmaker, who's the son of the late Republican Rep. Mac Collins of Georgia, has been moving closer to launching a Senate campaign for weeks. "Tires kicked. Fueling up," Collis wrote Monday in a social media post that was accompanied by a video where he showcased his ties to President Donald Trump. "Congressman Mike Collins, he loves this state," Trump said in a clip in the video. Collins was an early backer of the president, supporting him as Trump first ran for the Republican presidential nomination in the 2016 cycle. In the 2024 presidential campaign, when Trump won back the White House, Collins traveled on behalf of Trump to the crucial early-voting primary and caucus states of Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina. He also appeared at multiple Trump rallies during the 2024 cycle and opened three Trump campaign offices in Georgia. And Collins, not facing a difficult re-election in his solidly red House seat, campaigned in ten congressional districts across the country to help elect Trump-aligned candidates as the GOP defended its razor-thin majority in the chamber. Collins at the beginning of this year reintroduced the Laken Riley Act, which mandates that undocumented immigrants charged with burglary or theft be detained. It's named after a Georgia nursing student killed by a man who had illegally entered the U.S. The case grabbed national attention. The bill, which quickly passed the Republican-controlled House and Senate, became the first legislation signed into law by Trump as he started his second tour of duty in the White House. A Republican source said that Collins has a "great relationship" with the president and his political team. And a Georgia-based Republican consultant told Fox News that "the lane that Mike is going to run in is the America First fighter who's been with President Trump." "Mike has the opportunity to run in that lane because it's an authentic lane for him," added the consultant, who asked to remain anonymous to speak more freely. Trump, who is the ultimate kingmaker in GOP politics and whose endorsements in Republican primaries are extremely powerful, has yet to weigh in on whom he may back in Georgia's burgeoning Senate race. National Republicans were hoping to recruit popular two-term GOP Gov. Brian Kemp to take on Ossoff. But Kemp, who is term-limited, announced earlier this year that he would pass on a 2026 Senate run. Republican Rep. Buddy Carter, who for a decade has represented a district in coastal Georgia, launched a Senate campaign in the spring. Carter is also courting a Trump endorsement in the GOP primary. Georgia Insurance Commissioner John King was also running for the Republican nomination, but ended his bid on Thursday. Former University of Tennessee football coach Derek Dooley, who is the son of former longtime University of Georgia football coach Vince Dooley, is also considering a Senate bid. The younger Dooley is close with Kemp, who's a longtime friend. Recent polling indicates that Collins holds the edge over his GOP rivals for the party's Senate nomination and that he would be competitive with Ossoff in next year's general election. While Republicans consider Ossoff vulnerable, beating him won't be easy. The first-term senator hauled in over $10 million in the April-June second quarter of 2024 fundraising, bringing his cash-on-hand to over $15 million. And Georgia Democrats are taking aim at Collins. "Immediately after voting to rip away health insurance from 750,000 Georgians, Rep. Mike Collins now wants Georgians to give him a promotion?" Georgia Democratic Party spokesperson Devon Cruz said in a recent statement to Fox News Digital, as he pointed to the Medicaid cuts in the GOP's megabill that Trump signed into law earlier this month. Cruz argued that "Collins would join a crowded, messy primary that will leave the GOP nominee badly bruised, while Sen. Jon Ossoff is building massive momentum to take on whichever Donald Trump loyalist limps over the finish line."

New York Times op-ed details how Democrats lost the non-White voters Obama gained
New York Times op-ed details how Democrats lost the non-White voters Obama gained

Fox News

timea few seconds ago

  • Fox News

New York Times op-ed details how Democrats lost the non-White voters Obama gained

On Thursday, The New York Times published an opinion piece by Dr. Daniel Martinez HoSang, a professor of American studies and political science at Yale University, analyzing how the Democratic Party has lost a sizable portion of the non-White voters that former President Barack Obama brought into the party during his eight-year tenure. After researching and speaking with minority voters in typical Democratic strongholds like Milwaukee and the Bay Area of San Francisco, HoSang concluded that many of the non-White voters who now support President Donald Trump left the Democratic Party after becoming exhausted by identity politics and worsening economic conditions and crime. "The rightward drift of minority voters is not a story of just one election. It is a phenomenon years in the making, one that is reshaping the American political landscape. And to understand this movement, you must understand the transformations in the places they are happening," HoSang wrote. According to a recent poll by the Pew Research Center, Trump has made up extensive ground with Hispanic voters, Black voters and Asian voters. The poll found that Trump significantly closed the gap on Hispanic voters, with 51% of them going to former Vice President Kamala Harris, and 48% going to Trump, a significant shift from the 2020 presidential election, when Trump fell behind with Hispanic voters to former President Joe Biden, 61%-36%. The president also made significant gains with Black and Asian voters, boosting his support among Black voters from 8% in 2020 to 15% in 2024, and among Asian voters from 30% to 40%. One former Obama voter HoSang spoke to, Orlando Owens from Milwaukee, said that he joined the Democratic Party because he was Black, but was eventually disaffected after becoming tired of the party's identity politics and empty promises. "When you get your food stamp review, you have to go give shot records, school records, blood type. You almost have to get absolutely naked to get a $50 increase. But you have people coming to this country who have no documentation who are staying in hotels for two years, for free? How is that right?" he questioned. "A lot of Black people have already heard the promises from the Democrats. And nothing was delivered." HoSang argued that the foreclosure crisis, opioid epidemic and chronic funding shortfalls have "created cracks in the bedrock of Democratic support" in cities like Milwaukee, and yet, "Democrats have largely doubled down on promising relatively modest policy reforms meant to speak to the interests of voters of color." "Disappointed in the party that they saw as presiding over these profound economic shifts, nonwhite voters found that the institutions where many of them found their political identities — churches, unions, clubs — have been in decline," HoSang reported. With many of these typical community pillars in decline, HoSang contends that voters of color today are being influenced by new forces, such as right-wing podcasts, influencers and social media. "The narrative emerging from this wave of new media is a compelling one to disaffected communities of color; it captures the very real struggles they experience and repackages them as proof that Democratic policies have failed them," he argued. In San Francisco's Bay Area, another issue has swayed their heavily Asian-American population away from the Democratic Party — crime. HoSang spoke with one Bay Area resident, Nancy Yu Law, who voiced her frustrations about the city's crime problem that has made running her four stores in Chinatown much more taxing. "I have four stores in Chinatown. My store was broken into two times. At my gift shop, they took money and they took one tablet. My boba shop was broken into and vandalized. In those years, it was really unsafe. A criminal is a criminal. Elected officials did not stand up to say that," she told HoSang. "It felt like there's nothing you can change in California, so we were all just complaining. When I ask my friends, what do you think of President Trump? They are all pretty satisfied." The Yale professor visited Turning Point's AmericaFest conference last December where he spoke with several young working-class Black women who were part of conservative influencer Candace Owen's Blexit movement. He noted that there was very little evidence of "buyer's remorse" when it came to Trump, and that many of the Blexit members he spoke with worldviews were "far more heterodox, guided less by ideological rigidities and more by their aspirations to build lives of dignity for themselves and their communities." In closing, HoSang felt that many of the minority voters he spoke with were politically driven by the realities that their racial communities face, such as collapsing social structures, economic uncertainties and "a sense that the status quo is untenable." "Absent a solution to these core problems, appealing to disaffected voters of color on their racial identity alone has rung hollow. Grappling with the complexity of their frustrations, anxieties and hopes will determine the next political chapter of this country," he concluded.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store