I’m just reading news reports about Trump’s cabinet meeting which as held today (June 12). It’s being described as his first cabinet meeting.
I’m not looking to bash him, but is that correct? Isn’t it unusual for a President to be holding his first cabinet meeting in the fourth month of his administration?
They’ve all been confirmed since at least April so it’s not like there were vacant positions. In fact, with two exceptions, they were all confirmed back in February.
An event he called his first cabinet meeting occurred in March, but there were several vacancies.
Obama’s first cabinet meeting was on April 20th. This article describes his cabinet meetings as “not much more than ritualistic team-building exercises,” and I don’t think he was the first president to treat them that way.
That was the most Twilight Zone Cabinet meeting I’ve ever had the ill luck to witness. (It literally reminded me of a Twilight Zone episode…the one with the boy who can remake the world in any way he wants, and he’s surrounded by a bunch of sycophantic relatives who are scared shitless for their lives. I seem to recall that Billy Mumy played the boy, but I could be wrong…)
He’s not even the Adolescent-in-Chief. To use his own word, and completely meaningfully, Sad.
ETA: My google-fu is strong. It was Billy Mumy, and the venerable Cloris Leachman was also in it. The episode was called “It’s a Good Life.”
Loser Donald thought, “even though I didn’t ask Comey for his loyalty, I bet I could get everyone in my cabinet do do it, just to show how easy it is.”
Nothing but smiles, at every seat at the table. Granted they were frozen smiles but still, smiles. Things are alright in Trumporea. Happiness and ecstasy felt by all who surround The Dear Leader.
Cabinets are so big now, and departmental functions so complex and specialized, the President doesn’t tend to rely on the cabinet, all sitting together, to help him make decisions anymore.
Here’s a Life article by Hugh Sidney from 1968 bemoaning that the cabinet is “a ceremonial relic from the founding of the republic”.
Full Cabinet meetings are kind of pointless - it’s hard to imagine a situation where all of the Cabinet heads could have meaningful input from their own departments, other than a very general state of the nation sort of way.
To paraphrase: “God damn I am the greatest president of all time! My first hundred days had more days than any other president! We passed lots of legislation, more than any other president and my executive orders- just awesome! Now let’s go around the table and each of you, in your own words, tell me how great I am.”
Because SFAIK the Cabinet has no constitutional function in the US system. There is nothing which, either by law or by convention, has to be decided upon or agreed upon by the Cabinet, and while the heads of executive department have the constitutional function of advising the President “upon any Subject relating to the Duties of their respective Offices”, there’s no provision under which the Cabinet provides collective advice, or acts collectively in any way at all.
Hence, not much call for Cabinet meetings, unless a particular president chooses to adopt a practice of seeking collective advice from the Cabinet.