Collins: It's time to cast your vote for Donald Trump's worst cabinet member!

President Donald Trump pauses while speaking with members of the media before boarding Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Aug. 6, 2020, for a short trip to Andrews Air Force Base, Md. and then on to Cleveland, Ohio. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)
President Donald Trump pauses while speaking with members of the media before boarding Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, Thursday, Aug. 6, 2020, for a short trip to Andrews Air Force Base, Md. and then on to Cleveland, Ohio. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

OK, people, I know you're feeling a little wan and helpless these days. Sure does seem like a long time until November.

So let's take an early vote and pick Donald Trump's Worst Cabinet Member. The competition is intense this year. Some days it feels as if everybody in the administration is trying to grab the grand prize.

Vice President Mike Pence has been a faithful hanger-on from Day 1. He's now doing double duty as Trump's coronavirus czar. In which capacity he predicted April 24 that the epidemic would be "behind us" by Memorial Day weekend.

Last season's winner, Attorney General William Barr, certainly hasn't been resting on his laurels. At a recent House Judiciary Committee hearing, he had to be prodded twice before acknowledging that presidential candidates aren't supposed to accept foreign assistance.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo came in second-most-awful last time around. Can he make the big leap? He got a boost recently from my colleague Tom Friedman, who hinted at his opinion in a piece called "Mike Pompeo Is the Worst Secretary of State Ever."

Nothing like the tried-and-true Trump veterans when it comes to top-notch terrible. But there's new talent, too, thanks to all the shuffling that keeps going on. Chad Wolf, the acting head of homeland security, is the fifth person to lead the department in the current administration. If he can hang on until after the election, he'll have racked up more than a year on the job - a Trump administration achievement that is no doubt due to all the prior experience Wolf had as a travel industry lobbyist.

The postmaster general is no longer officially in the Cabinet, for reasons way too dense to explain. But we're going to leave Louis DeJoy in the mix because of his vigorous efforts to wreck the postal system - a goal that we're sure has nothing to do with the president's hatred of voting by mail.

Did we mention his wife has been nominated to be ambassador to Canada?

The Worst contenders keep on coming: Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross Jr., another previous winner, has been relatively quiet recently. Literally, since he reportedly keeps dozing off at meetings. The man is 82 - what do you expect?

Interior Secretary David Bernhardt is a former lobbyist for the oil and gas industries, a résumé you will notice crops up frequently. This has given him the in-depth understanding that allowed him to take a lead in the administration's massive financial relief package for oil and gas companies.

Bernhardt also seems to have been one of the central administration players in the drama of Lafayette Square, when protesters were ejected by military police to make way for Trump and his Bible.

If you're into the environment and want another option, there's EPA head Andrew Wheeler, a former lobbyist for - wait for it - energy companies. His latest crusade is extending the life of gigantic pits of coal sludge.

More! How about Health and Human Services head Alex Azar? He's been on the job a couple of years now, which by Trump standards makes him a hardened veteran. When he's not busy failing to respond to the pandemic, one of his other missions is overseeing the administration's attempts to gut the Affordable Care Act and replace it with some other thing.

You don't have to reward splashy bad behavior if you prefer the more modest figures who prefer to screw everything up from behind the scenes. Like Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, whose standing in the Worst poll soared when people realized they had a secretary of education who didn't like public schools.

Secretary of Transportation Elaine Chao may not have done much for infrastructure, but she sure is connected. Wife of Mitch McConnell, Chao is also a member of a wealthy and powerful family that's deeply into shipping contracts. That got up to $1 million from our government's recession-fighting Paycheck Protection Program.

So - who's your favorite? We'll announce the winners next week.

The New York Times

Upcoming Events