If there's a sacrifical pick, it's RFK Jr., not Gaetz
By Ross Douthat / The New York Times
Donald Trumps nominations of Matt Gaetz to be attorney general and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to be secretary of Health and Human Services are similar in the degree of opposition that theyre likely to provoke, but I suspect the intentions behind each choice are quite different.
Gaetz is Trumps passion pick, and according to the Bulwarks Marc Caputo he aced his interview with the president-elect by ignoring talk of legal niceties and promising to cut a swath through the Justice Department. Despite all the speculation about some kind of multidimensional chess involved in the appointment, it seems likely that Trump very straightforwardly wants Gaetz to be confirmed, and that the former member of Congress from Florida is precisely the kind of figure he desires to have as attorney general.
With Kennedy, on the other hand, the pick feels more like conventional coalition management, with much less personal presidential passion invested in the choice. Trump benefited meaningfully from Kennedys endorsement, and those who voted for the former Democratic and third-party candidate represent a distinct faction crunchy, suspicious, anti-establishment, often erstwhile lefties within the broader Trumpist tent. So the nomination is best understood as a reward for that support, a largely transactional gesture.
Yes, Trump shares some version of Kennedys vaccine skepticism. But its doubtful that the president-elect cares deeply about the issue, let alone about how Health and Human Services approaches food additives or pesticides or chronic illness; its more likely he just wants to keep Kennedy and his constituency onside.
https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/douthat-if-theres-a-sacrifical-pick-its-rfk-jr-not-gaetz/