Opinion by Jill Filipovic
Updated 7:48 AM ET, Wed April 8,
2020
President Donald Trump has royally
screwed up the federal government's coronavirus response, and he knows it. And
he's doing what he always does: Instead of fixing any of the many problems he's
caused, he's trying to weasel his way out of blame and doing all he can to dodge
oversight and responsibility.
On Tuesday, April 7, 2020, Trump demoted Glenn
Fine, the man tapped last month to independently oversee spending on the $2
trillion federal coronavirus stimulus package. Because Fine, who was the acting
inspector general from the Defense Department, was removed from that role, he
also lost his chairmanship of the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee
(only inspectors general are eligible to be on that committee). No explanation
was offered.
This isn't just about the specter of
the President potentially attempting to assert free rein over the outlay of
taxpayer-funded relief. American lives are at stake. The health of our economy
-- not just Wall Street winnings, but the livelihoods of tens of millions of
Americans, and our basic ability to put food on our tables and care for our
families -- is at risk.
Fine's role -- the one that will now
be assumed in an "acting" capacity by Sean W. O'Donnell, who will do
this along with his other job as Environmental Protection Agency Inspector
General -- was to make sure that an enormous stimulus package was being spent
as allocated, with minimal waste and no abuse or corruption.
It's disturbing that Americans now
may have to worry that our President and his cronies could turn a relief
package into a vehicle for self-dealing and a sweetheart deal for the rich, but
here we are.
Fine had been picked by a group of
independent federal inspectors general who determined he would do the best job.
According to The New York Times, the former Justice Department inspector
general "earned a reputation for aggression and independence in
scrutinizing the FBI's use of surveillance and other law enforcement powers in
the years after the September 11, 2001, attacks."
But in Trumpland, such competence
and expertise aren't a requirement but a barrier, especially when it comes to
oversight duties. The incompetent man at the top is desperate not to have his
inadequacy revealed.
Fine's head is just the latest to
roll as the President has been systematically guillotining watchdogs across the
federal government. In a transparently vindictive move, he also removed Michael
Atkinson last Friday as the Intelligence Community inspector general. Atkinson
had done his job in informing Congress about the whistleblower complaint that
led to Trump's impeachment. Trump doesn't like being held responsible for his
actions, so Atkinson was out.
On Monday Trump also attacked Health
and Human Services Inspector General Christi Grimm for doing her job. Grimm's
office had reported what Americans already know: That there are widespread
delays in testing for coronavirus, and serious supply shortages at the nation's
hospitals. None of this is news to anyone. But Trump nonetheless tweeted that
the report was "Another Fake Dossier!"
Trump seems to fancy himself more of
a king than a President. The same man who once pledged to "drain the
swamp" seems to love mucking around in it, and attacks anyone who tries to
clean it up.
No administration is perfect --
remember the Obamacare rollout debacle? Nobody expects error-free governance,
but good leaders are able to deal with mistakes, swiftly correct them, and
accept independent oversight. Anything else isn't democracy, it's dictatorship.
Americans in urgent need of relief during and after the pandemic need to see
this stimulus plan wisely and efficiently dispatched.
There are about 400,000 confirmed coronavirus cases and more than 12,800 dead -- and
those numbers may be significant underestimates. Without effective oversight --
and there is no reason to believe that Glenn Fine would not have provided it --
it will be impossible to tell if the stimulus package is being used efficiently
to help as many people as possible. Without immediate, unflinching feedback on
how Health and Human Services is managing this crisis, it will be harder to
know the ways to improve the stimulus in real time and stem the tide of
disease, death and financial ruin.
Donald Trump could not care less
about the health and well-being of the American people. He has no attachment to
good governance, professional ethics, or public service. He doesn't like
independent watchdogs because they're inconvenient for him; he prefers lapdogs.
And so he is exploiting the pandemic to sack anyone who might point out just
how terribly he has mangled the response.
The result won't just be a swampier
and more corrupt White House.
We Americans may pay with our lives.
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