WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. >> President-elect Donald Trump said Monday he is naming former Wisconsin Rep. Sean Duffy as his nominee to be transportation secretary, as he continues to roll out picks for his Cabinet.
Duffy is a former reality TV star who was one of Trump’s most visible defenders on cable news — a prime concern for the media-focused president-elect.
Duffy represented northwestern Wisconsin in the House for nearly nine years, was a member of the Financial Services Committee and was chairman of the subcommittee on insurance and housing. He left Congress in 2019, and is now co-host of a show on Fox Business, “The Bottom Line.”
In his announcement Monday, Trump noted that Duffy is married to a Fox News host, calling him “the husband of a wonderful woman, Rachel Campos-Duffy, a STAR on Fox News.”
Duffy is so far the second Fox-affiliated television host to be named to a Cabinet position in Trump’s new White House. Trump last week announced he was choosing Fox News host Pete Hegseth to serve as his defense secretary.
Trump said Duffy would use his experience and relationships built over the years in Congress “to maintain and rebuild our Nation’s Infrastructure, and fulfill our Mission of ushering in The Golden Age of Travel, focusing on Safety, Efficiency, and Innovation. Importantly, he will greatly elevate the Travel Experience for all Americans!”
Duffy in 2022 ruled out a run for Wisconsin governor, despite pleas from Trump to make a bid, saying he needed time to care for the needs of his family of nine children, posting on social media that his youngest child had a heart condition.
TV background
He is a former lumberjack athlete and frequent contributor to Fox News. He was featured on MTV’s “The Real World: Boston” in 1997. He met his future wife on the set of MTV’s “Road Rules: All Stars” in 1998.
A reality television background before politics is not unusual in Trump’s world. The former president launched his political career after his hit reality show, “ The Apprentice,”
Duffy, after his time on reality television, worked as a special prosecutor and Ashland County district attorney. He won election to Congress as part of a tea party wave in 2010.
When he first ran for office, Duffy was largely considered an underdog but attracted national attention for his campaign ads, in which he donned a red flannel shirt and chopped trees. He told voters he came from a “long line of lumberjacks” and would bring his axe to Washington.
He served until resigning in 2019.
Issues he faces
The Transportation Department oversees the nation’s complex transportation system, including pipelines, railroads, cars, trucks and transit systems as well as federal funding for highways.
If confirmed, Duffy would take over the department at a time of tremendous change, especially on the nation’s highways. Traffic deaths remain near record highs at a time when new technologies are being introduced that could help make the roads safer. Multiple companies are deploying autonomous robotaxis and even driverless semis with no specific federal regulations. And the nascent move from gasoline to electric vehicles presents safety problems of its own, especially with battery fires that can be difficult to extinguish.
The department includes the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which regulates automakers, including Elon Musk’s Tesla. The department sets fuel economy standards for cars and trucks and regulates the airline industry through the Federal Aviation Administration, one of its agencies.
Trump has criticized electric vehicles as expensive and unreliable and called President Joe Biden’s policy to promote EVs “lunacy.
He also has said EV manufacturing will destroy auto industry jobs and has falsely claimed that battery-powered cars don’t work in cold weather and aren’t able to travel long distances.
Trump has softened his rhetoric in recent months after Musk endorsed him and campaigned heavily for his election.
More trouble for Gaetz
Meanwhile, former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz’s nomination for attorney general took a new hit Monday as the House Ethics Committee reportedly set a meeting where it may discuss releasing its report on explosive sex and drugs allegations against him.
With some Republican senators questioning Trump’s pick, the panel will meet Wednesday to determine what to do with its report that likely includes accounts of Gaetz attending drug-fueled parties including sex with young women, one of whom was reportedly underage.
Although the lurid details have not been released, a deposition in a separate civil suit related to the case said the then-17-year-old high school student recounted a sexual encounter with Gaetz at an Orlando, Fla.-area house party.
Another woman who is older than the high school girl said she saw the couple having sex and later also had sex with Gaetz at the same party, according to the court papers.
The House ethics committee has taken testimony from the women and other witnesses for a long-running probe into Gaetz.
It was expected to release its completed report on Friday.
Gaetz short-circuited that move by abruptly resigning on Wednesday just as Trump announced his nomination to become the nation’s top law enforcement official.
The panel normally only releases reports on sitting members of Congress, meaning Gaetz’s resignation would usually have caused it to shelve the report for good.
This report contains information from the New York Daily News.