Trump’s Latest Weaponization Is about Historic Loyalty Oaths as Much as Current Ones

Yesterday, Trump issued three more Executive Orders targeting people for their free speech:

It seems Trump has an unlimited appetite for stripping people of security clearances they don’t hold. Or perhaps Trump’s handlers have figured out these EOs will provide an endless supply of dopamine hits that make the care and feeding of a malignant narcissist easier.

I want to add something to the flood of commentary about this abuse of power.

Miles Taylor, recall, was the author of an anonymous column published in the NYT.

To be clear, ours is not the popular “resistance” of the left. We want the administration to succeed and think that many of its policies have already made America safer and more prosperous.

But we believe our first duty is to this country, and the president continues to act in a manner that is detrimental to the health of our republic.

That is why many Trump appointees have vowed to do what we can to preserve our democratic institutions while thwarting Mr. Trump’s more misguided impulses until he is out of office.

The root of the problem is the president’s amorality. Anyone who works with him knows he is not moored to any discernible first principles that guide his decision making.

Although he was elected as a Republican, the president shows little affinity for ideals long espoused by conservatives: free minds, free markets and free people. At best, he has invoked these ideals in scripted settings. At worst, he has attacked them outright.

In addition to his mass-marketing of the notion that the press is the “enemy of the people,” President Trump’s impulses are generally anti-trade and anti-democratic.

He left the White House in June 2019, over five years ago, and identified himself as Anonymous in October 2020.

Chris Krebs was the eminently competent head of CISA whom Trump fired by Tweet in November 2020, 53 months ago, after Krebs affirmed the integrity of the 2020 election.

The fact [sic] sheet targeting Krebs describes this as an attempt to “end government censorship,” but then describes it as a part of “ensuring loyalty” (to the US; I guess Trump has lost track of where “C’est moi” ends and “l’État” begins).

ENDING GOVERNMENT CENSORSHIP: President Trump is committed to ending government censorship of Americans and believes that those who engage in such conduct should not have access to our nation’s secrets.

[snip]

ENSURING LOYALTY AND ACCOUNTABILITY: President Trump has made clear that loyalty to the United States must come before personal or partisan agendas, taking decisive action against those who misuse their undeserved influence to deceive the American public.

The fact [sic] sheet against Taylor fashions itself explicitly as an attempt to root out “betrayal.” and then asserts that one “drains the swamp” by “rooting out … disloyalty.”

ERADICATING GOVERNMENT BETRAYAL: President Trump is committed to ending the weaponization of government and believes that those who engage in such conduct should not have access to our nation’s secrets.

[snip]

DRAINING THE SWAMP: President Trump is delivering on his promise to drain the swamp by rooting out inefficiency, corruption, and disloyalty.

Both of these, then, explicitly make an example of past Trump appointees who “betrayed” Trump. They serve as an object lesson to the people leaking now.

But they are more than that. They also serve to order up an investigation into both men’s networks from their tenure under Trump.

Both EOs direct the Department of Homeland Security (for which both worked) to review their government activities to see whether they violated “suitability standards for Federal employees” or entailed dissemination of classified information; in Krebs’ case, Trump’s order explicitly incorporates Pam Bondi into the investigation as well, whereas the Taylor one only incorporates “any other relevant agency heads.”

Both deviate from earlier EOs in delivering the end report to the White House Counsel rather than Stephen Miller.

Here’s how that looks in the Krebs EO.

I further direct the Attorney General and the Secretary of Homeland Security, in consultation with any other agency head, to take all appropriate action to review Krebs’ activities as a Government employee, including his leadership of CISA. This review should identify any instances where Krebs’ conduct appears to have been contrary to suitability standards for Federal employees, involved the unauthorized dissemination of classified information, or contrary to the purposes and policies identified in Executive Order 14149 of January 20, 2025 (Restoring Freedom of Speech and Ending Federal Censorship). As part of that review, I direct a comprehensive evaluation of all of CISA’s activities over the last 6 years, focusing specifically on any instances where CISA’s conduct appears to have been contrary to the purposes and policies identified in Executive Order 14149. Upon completing these reviews, the Attorney General and the Secretary of Homeland Security shall prepare a joint report to be submitted to the President, through the Counsel to the President, with recommendations for appropriate remedial or preventative actions to be taken to fulfill the purposes and policies of Executive Order 14149. [my emphasis]

But there’s one more item of interest.

The investigative language builds on the EO Trump signed on inauguration day, which is mentioned prominently in the Krebs EO.

(b) The Attorney General, in consultation with the heads of executive departments and agencies, shall investigate the activities of the Federal Government over the last 4 years that are inconsistent with the purposes and policies of this order and prepare a report to be submitted to the President, through the Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy, with recommendations for appropriate remedial actions to be taken based on the findings of the report.

But it expands the review by two years.

That is, the investigative language in both these EOs authorizes the investigation of actions — and people — from Trump’s first term. In the guise of leak investigations (18 USC 793 has a ten year statute of limitation, otherwise any investigation into the nearly or already expired statutes of limitation would be pointless).

And the investigation within Homeland Security would roll out without court review. (I expect some of these witch hunts will be stymied by judges who recognize the command influence and obvious fraudulent accusations behind them).

This effort doesn’t just target Krebs and Taylor for what Trump claims is “betrayal.” It also provides the excuse to map out their associates within government, including those who may still be around.

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20 replies
  1. Critter7 says:

    The Krebs Fact (sic) Sheet doubles down on the false notion that Trump won the 2020 election.

    It accuses Krebs of having ” falsely and baselessly denied that the 2020 election was rigged and stolen, including by inappropriately and categorically dismissing widespread election malfeasance and serious vulnerabilities with voting machines.”

    Reply
    • emptywheel says:

      These fact sheets are riddled with lies, all building off the lie that the 51 former spooks said the Hunter Biden laptop [sic] was Russian disinformation.

      Reply
      • Alex_10APR2025_1036h says:

        When will Jason Miller, along with others, be investigated for testifying under oath that Trump lost the 2020 election?

        [Welcome to emptywheel. Please choose and use a unique username with a minimum of 8 letters. We adopted this minimum standard to support community security. Because your username is too short and common, your username will be temporarily changed to match the date/time of your first known comment until you have a new compliant username. /~Rayne]

        Reply
  2. Memory hole says:

    “. This review should identify any instances where Krebs’ conduct appears to have been contrary to suitability standards for Federal employees, involved the unauthorized dissemination of classified information, or contrary to the purposes and policies identified in Executive Order 14149 of January 20, 2025 (Restoring Freedom of Speech and Ending Federal Censorship). As part of that review, I direct a comprehensive evaluation of all of CISA’s activities over the last 6 years”.
    Did I read this right? Chris Krebs is to be investigated now pertaining to a 2025 executive order? For actions he took defending America in 2020, while the executive order was not in existence?

    Reply
      • harpie says:

        Did we ever find out what THIS was all about [from #J6TL]?

        ***
        11/10/20 Date of a FAKE letter [WHY this date?], hosted by a likely Iranian website, which purports to be from Chris KREBS (CISA) to Matt GORHAM assistant director of the FBI’s cyber division, which falsely claims that voting machines made by Dominion Voting Systems had been compromised. This letter is the subject of communications between FLYNN and GRENELL on 12/11/20 at 3:56 PM

        ***
        FLYNN took “the Fifth” many times when he was asked about this letter, ie:

        […] Q in this email, you reference a [earlier-date/time?] phone call with him and say you’d like to determine whether the letter that you attached was authentic. Why did you say that, General Flynn? […Referencing letter allegedly from KREBS to GORHAM, allegedly written on 11/10/20 …] Do you know who drafted this letter that’s shown as exhibit No.12, General Flynn?
        A The Fifth […]

        Reply
  3. Memory hole says:

    Other than the damage he causes, a lot of Pres. Trump’s executive orders seem similar to the reports of his father at the end of his career. That, mentally diminished, they would keep Fred in his office and let him shuffle and sign papers. And make phone calls, but it only went out to the secretary’s office. Trump operates similarly, but still has some of his wits about him.
    His handlers give him executive orders to sign. Some of which he understands.
    Then they let him rage about all the injustices done to him.

    Reply
    • P J Evans says:

      They aren’t reading the EOs, then, because these are The Felon Guy being a vindictive POS for stuff that saner people would have dropped years ago..

      Reply
    • Ginevra diBenci says:

      I love this insight, Memory Hole. It seems to me like the biggest difference is that Fred Trump wasn’t President of the United States.

      Maybe if he had been, we would have learned the Trump lesson.

      Reply
  4. M00n_silverside says:

    OT I drive a medical taxi in the Hudson Valley area where there was a ton a fraud by competing taxi cos. and mostly it’s taking recovering addicts to dose and then back home on the Medicaid train. It’s a lot of people. How will the Medicaid cuts feed thru to this world of already-pain ?
    And by the way I’m more seeing graphic designed signs saying “I voted for the felon” or “Felon 2024”. I hadn’t seen anything like that during the election. The sadism is mutating day by day

    Reply
  5. Attygmgm says:

    The beauty (for Trump) of his revenge tour is that his enemies list can be drawn upon any time he needs a shiny object to distract the press and compete with negative news, such as his backing down on tariffs. The harassment of those identified (and the chill for those who work for him now) are surely the goals, as he doesn’t really want to put at issue the 2020 election result. Litigating that would backfire on him.

    Reply
    • Ginevra diBenci says:

      We live now in a terrorist state. This time Trump names Taylor and Krebs, essentially for their dual inability to 1. time-travel (in order to comply with an order issued in 2025), and 2. lie. But the “investigations” implicate webs and webs lead…well, anywhere.

      The essential crime is wrong-think. If you dare express anything that contradicts Trump’s desired lie (and it’s always a lie), he wants you to feel fear. That more than anything is his joy.

      Reply
  6. Gavinicus says:

    You correctly note it is a fishing expedition. They will be looking for whatever the can find with zero prior evidence of illegal or improper activity. The Stasi is here.

    Reply
  7. wa_rickf says:

    It’s sad for our country, our allies, and the world, that the United States an extremely emotionally unwell man as POTUS.

    Reply
  8. Edward Dinger says:

    [Moderator’s note: your off-topic 565-word comment about tariffs will not be cleared to publish in this thread. This one time I will publish it under the newer of two still-open threads about tariffs. Do not do this again as it derails conversation pertinent to the topic, which in this case about Trump’s weaponization of the executive branch against persons he feels are insufficiently loyal to him.

    Community members: please stay on topic. Do not reply to this comment. /~Rayne]

    Reply
    • Rayne says:

      Please don’t dump links without context let alone explain how they relate to the topic. Article title and subhead or blurb are the absolute minimum you should offer.

      If you’re trying to make a point, do so — don’t expect community members to be mind readers. Many of them don’t have time to do more than scan and they won’t bother with context-free links. Earn their attention and respect with a little effort.

      Reply

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