Eric Trump one month ago:
>>>“So the house is going to vote to protect itself from glaring and obvious wrongdoing? The American people didn’t vote for this.
They voted for the opposite. They voted for transparency. This cannot pass,” Donald Trump Jr.
said on the social platform X.<<<(emphasis added)
Trump just fired about 17 inspectors general on a Friday night. Trying to slip something past the media by doing it on a Friday night is an old inside the beltway trick. However, Trump took the Friday night trick a step further by sending the emails without even making the terminations public:, let alone informing congress or providing a reason as required by law:
>>>The Trump administration has fired about 17 independent inspectors general at government agencies,
a sweeping action to remove oversight of his new administration that some members of Congress are suggesting violated federal oversight laws. . . .
The dismissals began Friday night and were effective immediately, according to two people familiar with the actions. They spoke on condition of anonymity to provide details that have not been made public.
Neither confirmed the exact number of firings, but an email sent by one of the fired inspectors general said "roughly 17" inspectors general had been removed. . . . The role of the modern-day inspector general dates to post-Watergate Washington, when Congress installed offices inside agencies as an independent check against mismanagement and abuse of power. <<<
The action removes oversight of the new administration
www.voanews.com
So, Eric, did the people vote for transparency, or did they vote for chicken sh*t midnight emails that unlawfully terminated the watchdogs who prevent the "glaring an obvious wrongdoing" you profess to be so concerned about?