President-elect Donald Trump on Friday named Russell Vought, a co-author of Project 2025 who served as a platform policy director for the Republican National Committee, as his pick to lead the Office of Management and Budget.
In a statement announcing his pick, Trump referred to Vought, who previously held the role in his first term, as “an aggressive cost cutter and deregulator who will help us implement our America First Agenda across all Agencies.”
“Russ knows exactly how to dismantle the Deep State and end Weaponized Government, and he will help us return Self Governance to the People,” Trump said. “We will restore fiscal sanity to our Nation, and unleash the American People to new levels of Prosperity and Ingenuity.”
Vought responded to Trump’s nomination in a post to X on Friday night, saying, “Thank you @realDonaldTrump! There is unfinished business on behalf of the American people, and it’s an honor of a lifetime to get the call again.”
In the chapter Vought authored for conservative blueprint Project 2025, he argued the OMB director “should present a fiscal goal to the President early in the budget development process to address the federal government’s fiscal irresponsibility.”
“Though some mistakenly regard it as a mere paper-pushing exercise, the President’s budget is in fact a powerful mechanism for setting and enforcing public policy at federal agencies,” he wrote.
Though Trump and many of his allies distanced themselves from Project 2025 — an initiative that includes policy proposals led by the right-leaning think tank Heritage Foundation and other conservative groups for a Republican administration — on the campaign trail, many people associated with the agenda have been tapped for positions in the incoming Trump administration. Some of those named have included Tom Homan as border czar, Brendan Carr as chairman of the Federal Communications Commission and John Ratcliffe as CIA director.
If he is confirmed by the Senate, Vought would oversee budget and the execution of Trump’s policies across executive departments and agencies.
Vought previously served as director of the Office of Management during Trump’s first term. He assumed the role after working as deputy director and acting director of that office before his Senate confirmation in July 2020.
Trump also announced a flurry other key Cabinet picks on Friday night.
He named former NFL player and Texas state Rep. Scott Turner as his nominee for housing and urban development secretary and Rep. Lori Chavez-DeRemer, R-Ore., to serve as labor secretary. Trump also nominated surgeon Marty Makary as commissioner for the Food and Drug Administration and said that he would select former Rep. Dave Weldon, R-Fla., as his nominee to serve as director of the Centers For Disease Control and Prevention alongside a slew of other picks.
Trump also said that Sebastian Gorka, a former aide, would serve as deputy assistant and senior director for counterterrorism. Gorka previously served as a national security aide for Trump in 2017, a role that he held for less than a year. He faced criticism after donning the medal of the allegedly Nazi-linked Hungarian group Vitezi Rend to Trump’s inaugural ball in 2017.