Trump’s plan to radically remake US government with RFK Jr and Elon Musk coming into view

by · RNZ
From left: Robert F Kennedy Jr, Donald Trump and Elon Musk.Photo: AFP

Analysis: For much of the presidential campaign, former president Donald Trump worked to distance himself from Project 2025, the detailed game plan written by conservative activists for a second Trump term.

Whether or not his allies will try to implement portions of the controversial plan if he wins the 2024 election is still the topic of some debate.

But there is an equally radical and expansive government reformation plan coming out of Trump's own mouth, in which heterodox figures like Robert F Kennedy Jr would be given free rein to "go wild" on the health safety system and Elon Musk would be enabled to, as the tech billionaire said, "start from scratch" with the federal workforce.

So without getting bogged down in whether Trump does or does not support Project 2025, here's a look at what the former president and the people he says he would empower have said they would do if he wins the White House.

'Go wild' with RFK Jr

Trump has promised to give Kennedy leeway to remake the way the government health apparatus protects Americans.

"I'm going to let him go wild on the food. I'm going to let him go wild on the medicines," Trump said during his closing argument rally at Madison Square Garden on Sunday.

Robert F Kennedy may be given the chance to remake the way the government health apparatus protects Americans.Photo: AFP

Much of what Kennedy pushes sounds positive. His "Make America Healthy Again" PAC promises to focus on "prioritising regenerative agriculture, preserving natural habitats, and eliminating toxins from our food, water, and air".

But those ideas are short on specifics, and there are personal issues that would impede anyone else from government service. Kennedy compared vaccine requirements with the Nazi Germany era, claiming Anne Frank was in a better situation; was once arrested for heroin possession; and has pushed wild conspiracy theories about chemicals in the water making children gay or transgender.

Kennedy's own health has also been a concern. He once ate so much tuna and perch that he experienced "severe brain fog" from mercury poisoning, he told The New York Times.

In video obtained by CNN, Kennedy told supporters on Monday that Trump had promised to give him sweeping power over multiple agencies if the former president wins the election.

"The key that I think I'm - you know, that President Trump has promised me is - is control of the public health agencies, which are HHS (Department of Health and Human Services) and its sub-agencies, CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), FDA (Food and Drug Administration), NIH (National Institutes of Health) and a few others, and then also the USDA (Department of Agriculture), which is - which, you know, is key to making America healthy. Because we've got to get off of seed oils, and we've got to get off of pesticide intensive agriculture," Kennedy said.

CNN has reached out to the Trump campaign for comment. So it's not clear if Trump's "go wild" is the same as Kennedy's view that he would be given such broad control. Trump has definitely said Kennedy would be included on a panel to investigate the rise in chronic diseases. For what it's worth, Project 2025 suggested a massive overhaul of health agencies, including splitting up the CDC.

"Trump's plans have been met with alarm in the public health community, not so much for the specific policy proposals Kennedy has communicated as part of his 'Make America Healthy Again' platform as much as for the key issue he's been leaving out: vaccines," according to CNN's Meg Tirell. She wrote an in-depth review of Kennedy's record on health issues.

Both Trump and Kennedy have expressed vaccine scepticism, and Kennedy has been a longtime activist pushing debunked theories about vaccines. During the campaign, Kennedy has deemphasised his views on vaccines, Tirrell notes. His push for more natural food does find support among some health experts.

Donald Trump has expressed vaccine scepticism in the past.Photo: ALON SKUY / AFP

'Start from scratch' with Musk

Musk, the super-rich Trump supporter, would be given a much wider portfolio than Kennedy and be charged with a massive downsizing of the federal government.

It's an even stickier situation since Musk's many companies, including SpaceX and Tesla, have a profit-motivated interest in business with the government. The US government currently relies on SpaceX, which also owns the satellite internet provider Starlink.

If there's any doubt that a Musk government role could be a risk for conflict of interest, simply look at the fact that he has said he could be in charge of the "Department of Government Efficiency". DOGE is the name of Musk's cryptocurrency, an area the Trump family is also keen to enter.

Musk is also constantly pushing out antisemitic things and has mused about how women shouldn't vote. Not to mention reports of his meetings with hostile foreign leaders.

In a potential new Trump administration, Musk promises a reinvention of the federal bureaucracy.

"Let's start from scratch," Musk said at an event in October in Pittsburgh, suggesting a drastic remaking of the federal bureacracy.

Elon Musk has been appearing at Trump rallies in the last few weeks.Photo: AFP / TED conferences / Ryan Lash

CNN's David Goldman looked this month at what Trump and Musk have said about a potential Musk role in government, which would be focused on steep spending cuts - Musk has said he could trim $2 trillion, perhaps with help from artificial intelligence - and rolling back regulations. But he'd do it in a nice way, apparently.

"Musk has promised a gentle touch, offering generous severance packages to laid-off government workers, while at the same time proposing an assessment system that threatens layoffs to wasteful employees," Goldman wrote.

The problem, according to the former treasury secretary Larry Summer, is that there's not $2 trillion to be gained from massive government layoffs.

"Respectfully, I think it is idiotic," Summers said on Fox News this week. "These people think it's like some business. But here's the problem: Only 15 percent of the federal budget is for payroll. So even if you took all the employees, every single person working for the federal government out, you couldn't save anything like $2 trillion."

Summers has a point about payroll. The government spent about $271 billion to compensate 2.3 million civilian employees in 2022, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

Summers said that to achieve trillions in cuts, Musk would have to look at Social Security and Medicare benefits, something Trump has promised not to do.

'No Obamacare'

House Speaker Mike Johnson, a top Trump ally, said in Pennsylvania on Monday that if Trump wins and Republicans keep the House, there would be a "massive" overhaul of the health care system. "No Obamacare?" shouted an attendee at the campaign event. "No Obamacare," Johnson said.

He added: "The [Affordable Care Act] is so deeply ingrained; we need massive reform to make this work. And we got a lot of ideas on how to do that."

House Speaker and staunch Trump supporter Mike Johnson.Photo: AFP / Drew Angerer

During a debate with Vice President Kamala Harris in September, Trump did not give specifics, but he did say he had "concepts" of a plan. These have not been shared publicly.

Trump tried, and failed, during his time in White House to repeal the Affordable Care Act, but retooling the health care system is clearly still a priority for Republicans.

Drastic change won't be easy

This is a good spot to point out that no matter what Trump is promising Kennedy and Musk, and no matter what Johnson hopes to do about health care, the realities of the US government make drastic change hard to achieve.

A minority in the Senate, assuming it's larger than 40 senators, could block any attempt to really undo the Affordable Care Act. The Senate is supposed to confirm top officials like Cabinet secretaries, although Trump and other presidents found ways around that rule in the Constitution. It's not clear if Kennedy could find the votes to be confirmed as secretary of Health and Human Services or if Trump would even nominate him. If Kennedy had a role in the White House, his ability to enact sweeping change would be limited.

While presidents have authority over the federal workforce and Trump was working to reclassify many federal employees to make them easier to fire when he was president, a "start from scratch" scenario would theoretically require congressional approval.

Not that we can say with any certainty what would require congressional approval since, unlike with the detailed Project 2025 plan, there are no specifics to match any of these big ideas. At least not yet.

-CNN