President Trump just torpedoed his own nominee’s confirmation hearing, and if you think that sounds like chaos masquerading as strategy, you’re paying attention.

Jay Clayton was supposed to appear before the Senate Intelligence Committee on Wednesday to make his case for leading the Office of the Director of National Intelligence. He’s a solid pick, honestly. Former SEC chairman, knows his way around complex regulatory environments, the kind of serious person you’d actually want overseeing America’s sprawling intelligence apparatus. But Trump pulled the plug at the last minute, declaring via social media that Clayton’s hearing won’t proceed until Jamie McDonald gets confirmed as U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York.

Let that sink in for a second. The president is holding his own national security nominee hostage to force movement on a completely separate appointment. It’s like refusing to fix your roof until the neighbor agrees to paint his fence. The logic doesn’t track, but here we are.

Senator Tom Cotton, who chairs the Intelligence Committee and isn’t exactly known for bucking Republican orthodoxy, initially pushed back. He said the hearing would proceed unless Trump specifically ordered Clayton not to show or withdrew the nomination entirely. That’s senatorial speak for “this is ridiculous and you’re making me look bad.” Cotton eventually acknowledged the postponement with barely concealed frustration, calling it regrettable and noting that Clayton is both a patriot and highly qualified.

You know what makes this whole mess more absurd? Bill Pulte remains as acting DNI while this theater plays out. Pulte is the guy Trump installed who immediately launched investigations into Fed Governor Lisa Cook, New York AG Letitia James, Senator Adam Schiff, and former Representative Eric Swalwell. These probes focus on mortgage fraud allegations and possible misuse of authority. They’ve all denied wrongdoing, naturally, but the pattern here isn’t subtle. These are people Trump views as enemies, and Pulte appears perfectly happy to aim the intelligence community’s considerable power in their direction.

This isn’t how intelligence agencies are supposed to function in a constitutional republic. The whole point of having professional intelligence services is that they operate independent of political vendettas. They’re supposed to identify actual threats to national security, not serve as the president’s personal investigative squad. When you weaponize these institutions, you don’t just undermine their credibility. You turn them into something dangerous and unpredictable.

The collateral damage from this confirmation circus extends beyond hurt feelings in the Senate. Pulte’s appointment effectively killed momentum for renewing Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which lets the federal government collect communications of foreigners abroad without a warrant. The program’s legal authorization lapsed over the weekend. Section 702 has its critics across the political spectrum, sure, but it’s also a genuine intelligence tool that helps track foreign threats. Letting it expire because of nomination games isn’t exactly what you’d call sound governance.

Trump now wants his SAVE America Act bundled together with FISA reauthorization, adding another layer of complexity to an already tangled situation. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer had a field day with this, accusing Trump of twisting himself into knots and embarrassing Senate Republicans. He’s not wrong about the embarrassment part. Senate Majority Leader John Thune basically admitted they’re flying blind, saying they’ll take things day by day until the White House clarifies its position.

Here’s the thing about limited government and conservative principles. They require predictable processes and respect for institutional boundaries. You can’t claim to support constitutional order while simultaneously treating Senate confirmations like bargaining chips in some larger game only you understand. The Senate’s advice and consent role isn’t a formality. It’s a constitutional check that matters precisely because it forces deliberation and accountability.

Clayton deserves better than this. The intelligence community deserves better. And frankly, Senate Republicans who’ve spent years defending institutional norms deserve better than being jerked around by a president who can’t seem to decide whether he wants his own nominees confirmed or not.

The path forward looks murky at best. Cotton says he looks forward to proceeding with Clayton’s confirmation in the near future, but what does that even mean when the president himself keeps moving the goalposts? How do you run a confirmation process when the nominating authority treats it as leverage for unrelated objectives?

This isn’t governance. It’s improvisation with serious consequences. National security doesn’t pause because the White House can’t get its act together. Foreign adversaries don’t wait for us to sort out our internal dysfunction. They exploit it.

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