Thereâs an old saying in politics: Never answer the question that is asked of you, answer the question that you wish had been asked of you.
Wyomingâs senior U.S. Sen. John Barrasso took it a step further when he appeared on Meet the Press on Sunday by answering the question before anyone had a chance to ask anything.
Host Kristen Welker merely welcomed the senator to show expecting the perfunctory âgood to be hereâ or a similar platitude, but Barrasso had no time for formalities. He came out guns a blazing.
 âWhat you saw was an earthquake election,â Barrasso said. âThe biggest comeback politically in the history of the country.â
âThey used to call Bill Clinton the comeback kid, Donald Trump is the comeback king,â he added, mentioning the president-electâs two impeachments, numerous court cases, assassination attempts, and the election night win â both the electoral college and the popular vote.
It was apparent that Welker really wasnât needed for the interview as Barrasso could surely fill the 10-minute slot on his own â as anyone attending one of his rallies in Wyoming would attest â but he paused long enough for Welker to slip in a question.
She wanted to know what the Senate Republican mandate was, as Barrasso is positioned to hold the second-highest job in the body, the Republican whip.
The economy and the border, is job one, he said. And then reversing so many policies that President Biden had put in place, mentioning energy and the border.
He also hoped Trump could have his cabinet installed and ready to go by inauguration.
âWe're going to have hearings and votes so that on Day One, Jan. 20, when the President takes over, he's going to have as much of the cabinet in place as we can get,â he said, mentioning the roadblocks the Democrats put up after the 2016 election.
With the landslide victory that Trump enjoyed, Barrasso reasoned Democrats would offer âa little more cooperation.â
Mass Deportation
Would the president get cooperation from Congress â mainly the money â to carry out his mass deportation plans?
Barrasso explained itâs a safety issue, and of the at least 10 million illegal immigrants in the country many were criminals.
âThese are people ⌠who have been murdering, raping and poisoning our citizens,â he said, stating that the president will target those people first for deportation.
What about the estimate that it could cost $88 billion to deport 1 million people? Barrasso didnât answer, but he did say that Americans were firmly behind immigration reform.Â
A recent Reuters poll showed 90% of Republican voters were not concerned that Trump could order mass deportations.
Further, 58% of Republicans and 15% of Democrats agreed with a statement immigrants without authorization to be in the country should be "arrested and put in detention camps while awaiting deportation hearings."Â
Presidentâs Cabinet
Welker pivoted back to the topic of President-elect Trumpâs cabinet and wondered as a medical doctor, could Barrasso support the appointment of Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. â a skeptic of some vaccines.
Barrasso said he wouldnât comment on any one person because nominations have yet to be announced.
He did praise the president for his selection of Susie Wiles as chief of staff, the first female in history to have that role.
He also said he wasnât worried about who Trump selected as attorney general.
âJohn Kennedy appointed his little brother Bobby as attorney general,â he said. âThe president gets to choose who he wants.â
The Budget
Although Elon Musk wasnât mentioned in the interview, his expected role in the Trump White House will be to slash the bureaucracy and eliminate waste, something he did at Twitter (now X).
At the same time, Trump has promised a massive amount of tax cuts with estimates reaching $9 trillion. Welker asked Barrasso if he supported approve such a measure.
He didnât seem worried about that, stating that the problem is spending.
âWhen we cut taxes in 2017, revenue money coming into the treasury actually went up, but we ended up spending more than we brought in,â he said. âSo that's the problem. It's not that we're taxed too little, it's we continue to spend too much.
âThe government is too big,â he added. âIt does too much, and we need to take a look at what we can do to make sure the American people have what they need.â
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Jimmy Orr can be reached at jimmy@cowboystatedaily.com.





