US president has been blatant in his appointment of relatives, close friends and big donors – almost none of whom have diplomatic experience
W
hen your goal is to “help Europe correct its current trajectory” because it is “weak”, “decaying” and facing “civilisational erasure”, your choice of highly trained operatives for the mission is plainly of paramount importance.
In Donald Trump’s case they include: a former burger magnate; his eldest son’s former fiancee; the owner of the Houston Rockets basketball team; a producer of Broadway musicals; PayPal’s co-founder; and a convicted felon who is also his son-in-law’s father.
A new cohort of US ambassadors has in recent months been appointed to Europe’s capitals – and did not take long to raise eyebrows. They are “basically all relatives, close friends or big givers [donors]”, said one EU diplomat, who asked not to be named. “That’s always been the US tradition, but it’s never been quite this blatant. These are like Maga disciples.”







