In the two weeks since Election Day, President-elect Donald Trump has been setting records with the pace of appointments for his incoming administration . But speed shouldn't be confused with organization.
Trump has pumped out more than two dozen appointments and nominations, including 16 Cabinet-level positions. The selection process, playing out in a converted conference room at his Mar-a-Lago club and on his gilded private jet, risks repeating some of the errors of his first term, and making some new ones.
The picks are at once a manifestation of Trump's pledge to voters to be a disruptive force in the country and a return to the chaotic era of governance that defined his first four years in the Oval Office.
"Last time they were slow and disorganized, this time they're fast and disorganized," said David Marchick, dean of the Kogod School of Business at American University and co-author of "The Peaceful Transition of Power," a book on presidential transitions.
He said Trump was moving at least four times as quickly at rolling out his Cabinet as his modern predecessors, but added "They're moving with speed, but they're making new mistakes."