President Donald Trump is taking aim at federal offices that investigate government malfeasance and protect workers from retribution, summarily firing and replacing five top ethics officials this week in an apparent attempt to consolidate his power over the sprawling federal bureaucracy.
Among those fired in the past week: the head of the Office of Government Ethics, which polices high-ranking officials suspected of violating conflict-of-interest rules; the leader of the Office of Special Counsel, which investigates whistleblower reports from government workers — and protects those workers from retribution; the inspector general of the U.S. Agency for International Development, who just Monday released a report detailing the cost to taxpayers of Trump’s effort to dismantle the agency; the chairwoman of the Merit Systems Protection Board, which hears appeals to firings and other disciplinary actions against federal employees; and the chairwoman of the Federal Labor Relations Authority, which protects federal employee unions from actions taken against them.
The firings were met with widespread condemnation from former officials and good-government advocates, who called them an ominous indication of how Trump intends to flout the normal guardrails — and, in some cases, federal law — that constrain public officials. Trump has pledged to root out government waste, fraud and abuse, but advocates noted that he is systematically eliminating many of the internal mechanisms already tasked with doing that work….