sometimes they don't want them because they were never a trum trumper. that's a problem. when you're not fully staffed and op ed in the "new york times" highlighted this tension, who do we believe, who can we believe, whatever that continuum answer is they don't have nearly as many people as they need. that's a problem. the president's willingness to change his mind sometimes on a dime also is a problem. and one of the casualties of that sometimes is what the president himself would like to accomplish. >> dickerson: let's go back to the core argument of the book which is tran transformational s are happening, give us a sense. >> look at the supreme court and federal bench. president talks about that not without legitimacy. brett kavanaugh so far as we know likely to be confirmed, that's two supreme court justices in two years. a dozen federal appellate court judges in his first 12 months, more than any president in the history of the country, that didn't happen by accident. i point out in the book that when donald trump first thought about the supreme court he said i want