Trump Says Transition's Going 'Smoothly,' Disputing Disarray Reports - New York Times
Late Wednesday, reports surfaced that Gov. Nikki R. Haley of South Carolina, who backed Senator Marco Rubio of Florida in the Republican primaries, might now be a candidate for secretary of state.
In a series of Twitter posts on Wednesday morning, Mr. Trump kicked off a concerted effort to reshape the narrative of a chaotic transition that has taken hold in the week since he won the election. In several conversations with reporters, Mr. Trump’s aides said that their efforts to assemble a new government were not in turmoil.
The president-elect criticized, and misrepresented, a report in The New York Times that said Mr. Trump had taken calls from several world leaders, but had done so haphazardly and without the normal State Department briefings that traditionally guide conversations with foreign leaders.
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Mr. Trump wrote that he had received “calls from many foreign leaders despite what the failing @nytimes said.” Of the transition effort, Mr. Trump added in another post, “It is going so smoothly.”
In the transition’s first conference call with reporters on Wednesday night, aides to Mr. Trump said teams would be announced on Thursday to begin the formal handoff from the State, Justice and Defense Departments and the National Security Council.
Sean Spicer, an adviser to Mr. Trump, said that the president-elect would also meet on Thursday with former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, Ms. Haley and Adm. Michael S. Rogers, the director of the National Security Agency, among others as he builds his administration.
Advisers to Mr. Trump said that reports of chaos were being spread by disgruntled former members of the transition or people bitter about the election results. Representative Devin Nunes of California, who is a member of the executive committee advising Mr. Trump and is the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said the transition was actually operating more efficiently because it was not filled with Washington elitists.
“The only people who are in chaos are the press,” Mr. Nunes said.
Aides to Mr. Trump acknowledged that members of the transition team had been fired since the ouster of Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey as the head of the transition. But they denied that the firings were the result of a purge of Mr. Christie’s allies orchestrated by Jared Kushner, Mr. Trump’s son-in-law. “Completely inaccurate,” said Jason Miller, a spokesman for Mr. Trump.
Instead, they said that the housecleaning was part of a renewed effort by Vice President-elect Mike Pence, the new transition chief, to eliminate lobbyists from the transition team. They declined to provide details about how many lobbyists had been fired or to name them, but said it was a priority.
“When we talk about draining the swamp, this is one of the first steps,” Mr. Miller said.
Mr. Trump has been ensconced in Trump Tower for days as he deliberates. A steady stream of potential nominees and transition officials arrived for meetings on Wednesday as the team released a list of 29 foreign leaders he and Mr. Pence had spoken with in recent days.
The lobby of Mr. Trump’s transition headquarters a block from the White House in Washington appeared to be bustling, with national security, transportation and other policy advisers arriving for meetings.
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But progress has been slow toward transferring control of the federal work force of 2.8 million people. A White House official said that administration officials at government agencies remained legally barred from delivering the guidance and briefings to Mr. Trump’s transition team because essential documents had still not been completed.
The wholesale shake-up of Mr. Trump’s team, including Mr. Christie’s ouster, forced Mr. Pence to sign new documents required by law. White House officials said Mr. Pence delivered them on Tuesday.
But by Wednesday night, Mr. Trump’s team still had not delivered a series of required supporting documents, including certifications that each transition member would abide by a code of conduct and would not divulge sensitive information about the inner workings of the government.
“The next step is for the president-elect’s transition team to provide us with the names of the individuals they have authorized to represent their transition effort across the government,” said Brandi Hoffine, a spokeswoman for the White House. “Once we have received those names and related materials, those individuals will be able to receive the briefing materials we have prepared and begin to communicate with their Obama administration agency counterparts.”
The lack of progress fit with Mr. Trump’s image during his presidential campaign as a professed disrupter of the status quo in Washington, disdainful of the institutions of government and reluctant to submit to the protocols and traditions that fuel so much of what happens here.
Mr. Trump was not the first president-elect to preside over a disorderly transition. George Bush’s transition in 1988 was marked by Republican infighting after many of Ronald Reagan’s aides were denied jobs in the new administration. Bill Clinton’s 1992 transition was marred by a personnel shake-up and a difficult-to-accomplish campaign promise he had made to slash the White House staff by a quarter. George W. Bush had a late start because of the disputed 2000 election result, and Barack Obama had to replace his head of personnel several times. But veterans of Washington’s transition rituals said Mr. Trump seemed to be further behind.
Officials in Mr. Obama’s administration said on Wednesday that they were ready to engage with Mr. Trump’s team. But they said little contact had been made. At the State Department, officials said that no one from the transition office had requested briefings ahead of Mr. Trump’s meeting on Thursday with Shinzo Abe, the prime minister of Japan.
“We stand ready to support him and his team with any information that they might require,” said John Kirby, the State Department spokesman.
“There has been no outreach to date,” Mr. Kirby added.
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