2026-04-03T22:15:35.378Z / 美国有线电视新闻网(CNN)
作者:亚当·坎ryn、克里斯汀·霍姆斯
发布于1小时23分钟前 / 2026年4月3日美国东部时间下午6:15
克里斯蒂·努姆和帕姆·邦迪在2025年9月15日椭圆形办公室的一场活动中聆听唐纳德·特朗普总统演讲
当唐纳德·特朗普总统解除司法部长帕姆·邦迪的职务时,这向他剩余的内阁成员传递了一个明确信号:他们此前享有的工作保障已不复存在。
六名知情人士告诉CNN,特朗普对表现不佳的高级官员越来越乐于解雇,这源于他对自己支持率下滑的日益加深的不满,以及对11月中期选举可能遭遇惨败的担忧。
今年3月,在多个月的负面头条报道和内部投诉后,特朗普宣布解除时任国土安全部长克里斯蒂·努姆的职务,这是他内阁高层首次重大人事变动。周四,特朗普因对邦迪胜任这一高关注度职位的能力感到失望,将其解职。
多名消息人士称,这两次解雇引发了人们的担忧:更多内阁成员可能很快会被解雇。这彻底终结了曾经笼罩本届政府的相对稳定感——尽管目前尚不清楚特朗普将做出哪些调整、以及何时调整。
“这是一次重新校准,”一名与特朗普关系密切的人士表示。“大家对他们抱有很高的期望,但他们未能达到。”
据多名知情人士透露,有多位内阁官员面临风险。劳工部长洛里·查韦斯-德雷默因部门内部对其行为的投诉正接受内部调查。不过一名消息人士指出,解雇查韦斯-德雷默可能会让白宫头疼,这意味着媒体报道会聚焦于特朗普首次公开解雇的三位高级官员均为女性。
还有联邦调查局局长卡什·帕特尔,今年早些时候他因被拍到与奥运冰球队畅饮啤酒而登上一系列负面头条。这一事件当时激怒了特朗普,被总统身边的一些人视为又一个本可轻易避免的失误。
多名消息人士称,数月来特朗普对商务部长霍华德·卢特尼克的态度反复无常。卢特尼克在政府内部是个行事强硬的人物,也招致了大量内部批评。但他与特朗普有着长期的友谊,迄今为止特朗普不愿解雇这位在从政前就相识的少数内阁官员之一。
对特朗普核心副手的新一轮审查,与他第二届总统任期第一年的情况形成了显著反差。当时白宫本能地抵制任何解雇行为,特朗普和他的高级助手担心此举会坐实民主党对本届政府的批评,同时削弱“他组建了白宫历史上最优秀人才团队”的说法。
但近几个月来,由于民众对经济的焦虑和对政府施政重点的不满,特朗普的选民支持率大幅下滑。共和党人如今越来越有可能在明年中期选举中失去对国会的控制权,这一局面将限制特朗普的政治野心,并让他的政府面临民主党人的一系列调查。具体取决于参议院选举结果以及共和党可能丢失的席位数量,这还可能会让确认新内阁官员的提名变得更加困难。
这些风险推动官员和盟友猜测,特朗普将采取更多人事变动,以证明他为政府设定了高标准,并传递出“未来几个月需要取得更多成就”的信号。
“这只取决于他是否认为你工作做得好,”另一名与特朗普关系密切的人士表示。“在这类事情上,只有一个听众。”
白宫发言人戴维斯·英格尔在一份声明中称赞了查韦斯-德雷默、帕特尔和卢特尼克的表现。
“特朗普总统拥有美国历史上最优秀的内阁和团队,”他说。“像卡什·帕特尔、洛里·查韦斯-德雷默和霍华德·卢特尼克这样的爱国者,正不知疲倦地落实总统的议程,为美国人民取得了巨大成就。”
即使是与特朗普关系最密切的人,也不清楚总统最终会做出什么决定。消息人士称,特朗普经常在解雇某人的问题上犹豫数月,他会征询同事的意见、试探潜在接替者,但不会做出最终决定。
除了特朗普的个人好恶之外,解雇高级官员还涉及更常规的顾虑——其中最主要的是谁能成为合适的接替者。
白宫已经有一批较低级别提名者等待参议院以微弱优势进行表决。现在解雇更多内阁官员意味着需要找到更多能获得确认的候选人,并且在特朗普已经向议员施压、要求他们打破惯例、在中期选举前通过一项庞大立法提案的当下,还要将这些提名加入排队待审的名单。
即便如此,邦迪的解雇还是加剧了“让美国再次伟大”(MAGA)阵营的焦虑:特朗普愿意做出更多调整,无论此举会带来多少障碍。多名与白宫关系密切的人士表示,特朗普政府的官员越来越意识到,越界行为可能会让他们丢掉工作。
尽管努姆的解雇早有预兆,在一场糟糕的国会听证会之后很快就到来,但关于邦迪的解雇,人们始终在讨论一个问题:“为什么是现在?”
处理爱泼斯坦文件虽是总统面临的重大问题,但该问题已经持续了一年多。在此期间,特朗普曾公开和私下都称赞过邦迪。没有明显的催化剂,没有决定性的时刻,甚至在特朗普做出决定前的几个小时里,就连他身边的人都不清楚他真的会动手解雇邦迪。
“我认为她大概率会被解雇?是的。但如果他看到所有负面报道后改变主意,也有可能,”特朗普周四正式解雇邦迪前几分钟,一名高级白宫顾问说道。
这一系列事件让那些也曾不时惹怒特朗普的内阁成员感到不安。而在特朗普就任总统14个月后的今天,他们都明确感受到了一种情绪:任何人都可能是下一个。
“我认为没人是安全的,”一名白宫盟友说。“永远都不会。”
‘This is a recalibration’: Trump Cabinet worries no one is safe after Bondi and Noem firings
2026-04-03T22:15:35.378Z / CNN
By Adam Cancryn, Kristen Holmes
1 hr 23 min ago
PUBLISHED Apr 3, 2026, 6:15 PM ET
Kristi Noem and Pam Bondi listen as President Donald Trump speaks during an event in the Oval Office on September 15.
Tom Brenner For The Washington Post via Getty Images
When President Donald Trump ousted his attorney general, Pam Bondi, it sent a clear message to his remaining Cabinet members: The job security they’ve enjoyed until now is no longer guaranteed.
Trump has grown increasingly willing to fire top officials who he believes are underperforming, amid deepening frustration with his declining approval ratings and fears of a wipeout in the November midterm elections, a half-dozen sources familiar with the matter told CNN.
The president announced he was removing then-Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem in March following months of damaging headlines and internal complaints, marking the first major departure from his senior ranks. On Thursday, he ousted Bondi after souring on her ability to do the high-profile job.
The twin firings have fanned fears that additional Cabinet members could soon be on the chopping block, multiple sources said. That’s brought an abrupt end to the sense of relative stability that once pervaded the administration — even as it remains unclear what changes Trump will make and when.
“This is a recalibration,” said one person close to Trump. “There are high expectations that are not being met.”
There are multiple Cabinet officials who could be at risk, according to several sources familiar. There’s Labor Department Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer, who has come under internal investigation following complaints within the department about her conduct. However, ousting Chavez-DeRemer could cause a headache for the White House, one source noted, suggesting the media reaction would focus on the fact that all three of Trump’s first high-profile firings were women.
There’s also FBI Director Kash Patel, who generated a series of negative headlines earlier this year after being filmed chugging beer with the Olympic hockey team — an episode that irritated Trump at the time and was viewed by some around the president as just the latest of several easily avoidable missteps.
And Trump has been hot and cold for months on Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, multiple sources said. An abrasive figure within the administration, Lutnick has also attracted a wide range of internal critics. Yet he maintains a longstanding friendship with Trump, who has so far proven unwilling to dump one of the few Cabinet officials who knew him well before his political career.
The fresh scrutiny of Trump’s top lieutenants represents a marked shift from the first year of his second presidential term, when the White House reflexively resisted carrying out any firings at all. At the time, Trump and his top aides worried doing so would amount to confirming Democratic critiques of the administration, while undercutting claims that he’d assembled the best collection of talent in White House history.
But Trump’s standing with voters has eroded significantly in recent months, driven by Americans’ angst over the economy and unhappiness with his administration’s priorities. Republicans are now increasingly likely to lose control of Congress next year, a development that would curtail Trump’s ambitions and expose his administration to a range of Democratic investigations. Depending on Senate elections — and how many seats Republicans potentially lose — it could also make confirming new Cabinet officials significantly harder.
Those stakes have fueled speculation among officials and allies that Trump will make more personnel moves, in a bid to demonstrate the high standards he’s setting for his administration — and signal that more needs to be accomplished in the coming months.
“It’s just a function of whether he thinks you’re doing the job well,” another person close to Trump said. “When it comes to this stuff, it’s an audience of one.”
In a statement, White House spokesman Davis Ingle praised the performance of Chavez-DeRemer, Patel and Lutnick.
“President Trump has the most talented cabinet and team in American history,” he said. “Patriots like Kash Patel, Lori Chavez-DeRemer, and Howard Lutnick are tirelessly implementing the President’s agenda and achieving tremendous results for the American people.”
Even for those closest to Trump, it remains unclear what the president will ultimately decide to do. The president often wavers on firing someone for months, surveying associates and floating potential replacements without committing to a final decision, sources said.
Beyond Trump’s personal feelings, there are also more conventional concerns in play when it comes to dismissing his top officials — chief among them who might serve as a viable replacement.
The White House already has a handful of pending lower-level nominees being considered by the closely divided Senate. Ousting more Cabinet officials now would mean finding more candidates who could win confirmation — and adding them to the queue at a time when Trump is already pressuring lawmakers to defy precedent and pass a sprawling legislative package just ahead of the midterms.
Even so, Bondi’s firing has ramped up anxiety in MAGA world that Trump is willing to make more changes regardless of the obstacles they create. Trump officials are increasingly aware that stepping out of line could cost them their job, multiple people close to the White House said.
And while Noem’s ouster was well-telegraphed, coming soon after a disastrous congressional hearing, a consistent subject of discussion when it comes to Bondi’s ouster has been: “Why now?”
The handling of the Epstein files, while a huge issue for the president, had been ongoing for over a year. During that time, Trump had praised Bondi both publicly and privately. There was no apparent catalyst, no defining moment, and no clear sense even in the hours before he made the decision that Trump would follow through with the firing.
“Do I think she’ll probably get fired? Yes. But could he see all the negative coverage and change his mind, also yes,” one senior White House adviser said Thursday, moments before Trump officially fired Bondi.
That sequence of events has been a source of discomfort to others in the Cabinet who have at times faced Trump’s ire. And 14 months into his presidency, it’s left them with the distinct impression that anyone could be next.
“I don’t think anybody’s safe,” said one White House ally. “Ever.”
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