Guno צְבִי
We fight, We win, Am Yisrael Chai
Officials in President Trump’s Cabinet meetings spend at least 1 out of every 6 sentences praising him, according to a New York Times analysis published Monday — a level of public flattery that experts say is historically unusual.
The New York Times compared televised Cabinet meetings from Trump’s first term — between July 2017 and May 2020 — to those in his second term over the past year and a half, and found that officials occasionally pushed back on Trump’s decisions and stances during his first term.
During the March 24, 2025, cabinet meeting, Rubio, referring to the Russian war in Ukraine, said, “This is a war that’s gone on for three years, as you’ve pointed out — that, as you’ve rightly pointed out, would have never happened had you been president.”
“President Trump has assembled the most talented Cabinet in history,” White House spokeswoman Allison Schuster told HuffPost.


"Flattery and blind loyalty may be good for a president’s ego, but they rarely produce the candid advice that leads to sound policy decisions,” Chris Lu, who served as White House Cabinet secretary under former President Barack Obama and is now a professor at the University of Virginia Miller Center, told HuffPost. “A president should want advisers who are willing to tell him what he needs to hear, not just what he wants to hear.”
The New York Times compared televised Cabinet meetings from Trump’s first term — between July 2017 and May 2020 — to those in his second term over the past year and a half, and found that officials occasionally pushed back on Trump’s decisions and stances during his first term.
During the March 24, 2025, cabinet meeting, Rubio, referring to the Russian war in Ukraine, said, “This is a war that’s gone on for three years, as you’ve pointed out — that, as you’ve rightly pointed out, would have never happened had you been president.”
“President Trump has assembled the most talented Cabinet in history,” White House spokeswoman Allison Schuster told HuffPost.


"Flattery and blind loyalty may be good for a president’s ego, but they rarely produce the candid advice that leads to sound policy decisions,” Chris Lu, who served as White House Cabinet secretary under former President Barack Obama and is now a professor at the University of Virginia Miller Center, told HuffPost. “A president should want advisers who are willing to tell him what he needs to hear, not just what he wants to hear.”