
It’s been obvious since January (if not before) that Gov. Phil Scott has adopted a very different tone when it comes to That Man in the White House. It used to be that Scott felt no qualms about openly criticizing Trump. Lately, his approach has been decidedly more circumspect. I used to chalk this up to a new realpolitik in which the November election gave him many more Republican allies in the Legislature, most of whom are avid Trumpers. In response, Scott had to be more careful.
Now? I think Phil Scott is bending the knee, taking the coward’s way out, keeping his head down, sacrificing principle in favor of expediency. He doesn’t want to join the likes of Harvard, UPenn, immigrants, transgender folk, Stephen Colbert, the Washington Commanders, and Rosie O’Donnell in Trump’s crosshairs.
Two points. First, Scott’s transportation secretary refusing to cooperate with Attorney General Charity Clark’s lawsuit over cutbacks in federal funding for electric vehicle infrastructure. Second, his staunch defense of state cooperation with Trump’s immigration regime despite the fact that his own Department of Corrections is having a hard time dealing with the feds’ extraconstitutional thuggery.
Also this: A carefully worded statement from Clark that hints at a broader Trump-avoidant stance by the Scott administration.
Details. As Seven Days’ Kevin McCallum reported a couple weeks ago, a federal judge has ordered the release of millions in EV infrastructure dollars withheld by Trump — but excluded Vermont from the disbursements because Clark failed to provide evidence of “irreparable harm” if the federal money wasn’t unfrozen. And the reason for that failure is the refusal of Transportation Secretary Joe Flynn to cooperate with Clark.
At stake is nearly $17 million for EV infrastructure in Vermont — which happens to be the area where Scott has made the most progress on fighting climate change. Why did Flynn stay out of it? McCallum paraphrases:
There is a real risk the state could lose the [EV] grant funding, [Flynn] acknowledged. But it seemed smarter to focus on ensuring the state receives its share of a larger upcoming round of federal highway funding than to fight over the smaller EV-charging dollars, he said.
The only way those two issues could be linked is if the Trump administration and/or the Republican Congress try to punish states that fought for the EV funds. Flynn’s abstention indicates that the governor is afraid enough of retribution from President Manbaby that he’s willing to forego the best available funding source for EV buildout. Sad!
On to ICE and the state of Vermont. During the legislative session, the Democratic majority was looking for ways to minimize the state’s entanglement with Trump’s immigration and border enforcement efforts. Scott was not a fan. He accused the Dems of getting “caught up with the rhetoric and the outrage” and letting it interfere with the flow of legislative work.
He also argued that it was better to house detainees in Vermont prisons than to have them shunted off to God knows where. Seemed like a good point, and the Legislature basically agreed. But we have discovered, thanks to VTDigger reporter Ethan Weinstein’s exclusive story, that Vermont is, in fact, being used as a way station by the feds. ICE and the Border Patrol have no interest in our feelings about their enforcement regime. They’re just going ahead and doing what they want to do.
Scott must have known this. The internal communications unearthed by Weinstein date back to the early days of Trump’s second term. One key memo, written in early March by the head of the state prison at St. Albans, reports that the feds were “disregarding” Vermont’s distaste for serving, in Weinstein’s words, as “the feds’ hub in the Northeast.”
From which I conclude that Scott was lying to the Legislature and the public about the feds’ use of state prisons. He had to know that Vermont was being used as a cog in Trump’s giant heartless enforcement machine.
As for my third point, in his story on the Clark/Flynn split, McCallum quoted Clark as saying that the Scott administration had “taken a different approach to handling the illegal and unconstitutional actions made by the Trump administration.”
That’s a broad statement. It seems to stretch beyond the EV funding issue. Clark has taken part in lawsuit after lawsuit against Trump’s unconstitutional and/or illegal actions on a variety of fronts. Her statement strongly implies the Scott administration isn’t being helpful.
It’s about as close as Clark can get to directly criticizing the Scott administration because, after all, they are in an attorney-client relationship. She has to abide by the strictures of that relationship. In that context, her words are remarkable for their candor.
Has the Scott administration hamstrung any of Clark’s other efforts to fight back against Trump? From Clark’s words, I can only conclude that it has, although Clark is unlikely to volunteer any such information.
We know two specific instances where Scott and his minions have pursued a policy of appeasement. It’s safe to assume there are more.

It isn’t just with Trump. Its lack of leadership in other key areas. Our healthcare system is unaffordable. We have the fourth highest per capital homeless rate in the country. Out of state drug dealers are using Vt as a way station. Our affordable housing crisis is an economic issue to attract young families and workers to our state. There is no vision to create a comprehensive system design to to respond to any of this issues. We need a new governor.
“We know two specific instances where Scott and his minions have pursued a policy of appeasement. “
While this may seem like the safest way with the Trumpers, we all should have learned from British Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain, and his policy of appeasement toward one Adolf Hitler back in the 1930s. It’s the same thing here and now.
“It used to be that Scott felt no qualms about openly criticizing Trump.”
That was never true. The most Gov “What would you suppose I should do?” Scott could do was a few timid mutterings into some corner.
Winooski superintendent (Wilmer Chavarria, US citizen) detained and “interrogated” for hours in Texas airport without reason, told he is lying about being a superintendent, commanded to give access to confidential school district records by unnamed/unidentifiable “officials,” separated from spouse whose relationship to Mr Chavarria was repeatedly mocked, instructed that there are no rights for US citizens at ports of entry, finally released without either reason for detention or an apology.
What will the Governor say, do you think?
He won’t say anything unless directly asked. If asked, he’ll probably Susan Collins it.
fwiw, I wrote the comment above to the Governor & got back boilerplate: Thank you for reaching out about Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detentions in Vermont. Governor Scott understands the frustration, anxiety and fear many are feeling.
I responded, “Did you read my comment at all? It dealt with a Vermont/US citizen, a state official (superintendent of Winooski schools), detained and interrogated at a Texas port of entry upon return from a visit with his family in Nicaragua. Try to be a little more attentive!
Boy, that’s weak even by Phil Scott standards.
Shitty passive-aggressive people make shifty passive-aggressive politicians. Governor Scatt is well named.
I have a different take. I have seen Scott moving further and further right for the last couple of years, maybe even 3 years. It’s been a progression but unmistakable.
i believe our dear governor has his sights on Peter Welchs seat when he retires. And in order to court the far right voters and money, even RNC money, he has to be leaning or at ‘off the reservation cookoo.’
The other option is that he has just devolved along with the entire Republican party.
It could be a combination… But I don’t believe he has moved so far towards MAGA bc of the 2024 legislative election. He wins Vermont because people are idiots and think his handling of COVID makes him some sort of great leader and/or because he’s a masterful communicator and fiction story teller.
It’s easy to see that he’s a failure. His legacy is going to be refusing to work with the legislature, handling COVID well and a long with his Floridian SecEd, bringing an end to the public school system in VT.
Whatever excuse you want to attribute to his move right, the fact is he has joined the far right in being anti-American and anti-democracy. Watch as he keeps moving farther right.
There are 3 reasons the Democrats won’t be able to unseat him in 2026… No viable candidate puts their hat in the race. Democratic senators continue to support Phil Baruth. Democratic and Republican House Reps continue to support Jill Krowinski.