Bill Pulte is Trump’s most dangerously sycophantic promotion yet
President Donald Trump announced Tuesday that Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte would become acting director of national intelligence. Pulte is stepping in to replace Tulsi Gabbard, who resigned from her post last month. Though Trump claimed his appointee “has deep experience managing the most sensitive matters in America,” he’ll take the position with literally zero relevant experience for coordinating 17 American intelligence agencies’ work.
But Pulte’s appointment makes slightly more sense when you consider his place in Trump’s orbit. The 38-year-old heir to his family’s massive home construction company shares the president’s love of social media bullying, golf and abusing power for personal gain. In currying Trump’s favor, he’s become the boy who cried “fraud,” using his limited portfolio to find leverage against the president’s enemies. With the broader remit his new perch provides, Pulte could do much more harm that he already has, opening the door to threats both foreign and domestic.
The Office of the Director of National Intelligence was created in the aftermath of 9/11, based on the idea that one office should be responsible for sorting the signal from the noise amid a cacophony of perpetually incoming data. Pulte’s appointment as acting DNI fits within the general rule that acting officials in high-ranking roles must be Senate-confirmed. But his lack of any experience and newfound ability to cherry-pick data for Trump’s benefit rather than the national interest reveals a major problem with that standard.
Before Tuesday, acting Attorney General Todd Blanche would have been the slam-dunk pick for most dangerous sycophant Trump has installed. Pulte’s new appointment challenges that claim. Since stepping into his role at the FHFA — which he will still hold while overseeing America’s intelligence operation — he has acted as though he is part of the president’s law enforcement team. [Continue reading…]