An Industry Group Says the
Trump Administration Is Run “Like a Bad Family Owned Small Business”
One candid glimpse emerges in a pair of PowerPoint presentations
delivered last year by top executives of the Associated General Contractors of
America (AGC), one of the construction industry’s national trade groups.
Trump, the presentations state, is an “autocratic leader” who
regularly “humiliates [his] senior team” and is running the administration
“like a bad family owned small business.”
One presentation quotes the president’s statement that
infrastructure should be “easy” and follows it with a rhetorical eye-roll:
“Really?????”
At the same time, the presentations make clear that the industry
group views Trump as a godsend for their agenda of rolling back environmental
and labor regulations.
Here’s how Jeff Shoaf, the group’s longtime chief lobbyist in
Washington and now chief operating officer, put it in a July 2017 PowerPoint,
which appears to have been inadvertently posted on the website of the
organization’s Texas chapter (above, left).
“Since so many of our members are family owned small businesses,”
he said, the language in the slide is “a way that makes it relatable to them.
One of our jobs is to explain to our members what is happening in Washington,
as we work on their behalf.” AGC says it represents more than 26,000 firms
around the country.
Another slide, under the heading “Legislative Agenda,” lets a
photograph summarize the group’s view (right):
The image of the dumpster fire, Shoaf said, referred to the
Republicans’ failed attempts to repeal Obamacare last year.
Shoaf said he views the Trump administration as being “run more
disruptively than shoddily. They’re not wedded to the normal talking points
that either Barack Obama or George W. Bush came with.”
Following the descriptions of the administration’s dysfunction,
the PowerPoint pivots to describing what it characterized as major successes in
the construction industry’s “regulatory roll back” agenda since Trump entered
office.
“With President Trump in office, there are many Obama administration
executive orders, rules, and other requirements in AGC’s crosshairs,” it says.
The group touts major victories in the form of repealed or
delayed environmental and labor regulations (left).
A quick guide to the shorthand:
The “blacklisting” rule refers to President Obama’s “Fair Pay,
Safe Workplaces” executive order that required companies bidding on
federal contracts to disclose labor law violations. That rule has been repealed
by the Trump administration.
The so-called Volks rule increased the ability of the Occupational Safety
and Health Administration (OSHA) to enforce requirements that employers keep
records of injuries and illnesses. That rule has also been eliminated.
The silica regulation lowers the permissible exposure limit
of silica dust that construction workers can be
exposed to on the job. According to OSHA, inhaling silica can cause cancer and other fatal
diseases. That regulation’s implementation was delayed but has since gone into effect.
The “GHG” rule is a Department of Transportation greenhouse gas
regulation aimed at getting data on emissions from vehicles traveling on federally funded highways. The Trump
administration initially delayed the rule’s implementation and has since
started the process of repealing it entirely.
In a similar presentation delivered at a September conference,
AGC CEO Stephen Sandherr also questioned Trump’s approach to an infrastructure
package, which the construction industry strongly supports (right):
Turmail, the group’s spokesman, pointed to its recent statement praising the administration’s release of an
infrastructure plan as “the start of what should be a timely, bipartisan and
bicameral process to identify the best ways to fund and finance desperately
needed improvements to our public infrastructure.”
Do you have information about the Trump administration and
infrastructure? Contact Justin at justin@propublica.org or via Signal at
774-826-6240.
Justin
Elliott is a ProPublica reporter covering politics and
government accountability. To securely send Justin documents or other files
online, visit our SecureDrop page.