WASHINGTON — What did President Donald Trump learn during his four-year hiatus from the White House?
For one thing, he seems to have learned how to listen.
But also, to judge by the first week of his second term, Trump 2.0 seems more focused, mission-driven and prepared to get things done at warp speed.
Here’s a short list of other lessons learned:
Staff the administration with people who have your back
All hail Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, a Florida-based political consultant who engineered Trump’s comeback. As they say in Washington, personnel is policy.
Then there are strong veterans from Trump’s first term. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt worked for the White House during the first term and on the Trump 2024 campaign. Former Office of Management and Budget director Russ Vought will be in charge of the nation’s books again. Border Czar Tom Homan, who worked immigration for the first Trump administration, will be Trump’s wing-man on the border, if with a new title.
But also pick mavericks who excel at mixing it up
In March 2020, when COVID-19 first alarmed America, Trump’s pick to be N.I.H. director, Stanford Medical School epidemiologist Jay Bhattacharya, had the common sense to question whether excessive shutdowns were in the public’s best interests. He also is one of the three authors of the Great Barrington Declaration that advocated “focused protection” for the medically vulnerable but normal life for others.
I’ve known San Francisco lawyer Harmeet Dhillon was a stalwart champion for conservatives facing roadblocks directed at conservatives only. She does not back down.
I’ve never been comfortable with Trump’s Health and Human Services pick Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his take on vaccines, but I cannot help but smile at the prospect of an HHS secretary who is not burrowed in the health-care establishment’s confining pockets
Make sure the permanent class inside the beltway knows you’re in charge
Team Trump called an end to the COVID-era work-from-home bonanza that put too much space between beltway staffers and the public they are supposed to serve. Trump told federal workers it’s time to get back to their work stations, which is good news for taxpayers, but also D.C. eateries and retailers.
Put a cork on dinosaur initiatives like affirmative action
In 1965, President Lyndon Johnson issued Executive Order 11246 that brought America decades of “de facto racial quotas under the euphemism ‘affirmative action,’” Pepperdine University visiting professor Steven Hayward wrote in the New York Post. Just when America thought it would never go away, Hayward noted, Trump revoked it in his first week.
Go after other giants of the establishment
During a call into the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Thursday, Bank of America chief executive Brian Moynihan asked Trump about the impact on the U.S. economy of his executive orders concerning trade and immigration. Trump used the opportunity to bring up a sensitive conservative grievance — the de-banking of conservative organizations by financial giants.
Bank of America responded on X, “Bank of America serves more than 70 million clients and we welcome conservatives. We would never close accounts for political reasons and don’t have a political litmus test.”
And yet a number of conservative groups have documented the closure of their accounts by big banks.
Don’t abandon the smaller campaign promises you made
I salute Trump’s new “One Flag Policy” that limits flags furled outside U.S. embassies and outposts to the Stars and Stripes, as the Washington Free Beacon first reported. There is an exception for the Prisoner of War/Missing in Action (POW/MIA) emblem and Wrongful Detainees Flag, but the policy means you won’t see Black Lives Matter flags and gay pride flags that were displayed abroad under President Joe Biden.
Keep it simple
Finally, again, there are two genders.
Have fun
Trump proposed renaming the Gulf of Mexico — to make it the Gulf of America. It was a classic Trump troll.
Contact Review-Journal Washington columnist Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders@reviewjournal.com. Follow @debrajsaunders on X.