that and make sure he makes good on it? you bet, you bet. he s got 51 days. and again, the president has this has been an unconventional campaign. he s an unconventional president-elect. you know, i have been so impressed with how they ve gone about the cabinet selection. yeah. i think he s listened to advisers. i think he s made studied decisions of the decisions that have been made. some people are frustrated because there s some other decisions that haven t been made. sure. but i think it s because he wants to have the information at hand before he actually enacts it. i m going to call the standard which i think is the standard that i think should be followed, the burgess standard. we ll get you back on the show. and i ll try to tilt it to the hayes /tildon conflict agai. professor, we ve got a few things before us. one is there are some folks so in a strict statutory sense,
certainly there are some physicians that maintained a practice when coming to congress. i debated it. but the type of practice i maintained was a 24/7 hands on, full time job. i knew this was a 24/7 full-time job. i had to make the decision. when i was running, people asked me what would i do. i said if elected i would serve in congress and no longer be a doctor. i want to honestly and genuinely praise you for that. it could be a difficult thing. it could have been the case that you did that and two years later you get voted out and you start from scratch again. your own admirable and above and beyond actions in this case are a pretty good standard for the man who is going to be the most powerful man in the united states with the most difficult job in the world. we know some of his closest advisers are his children and i suspect his kids, don and ivanka are studying this, and goodness knows they ve all got good lawyers. this is not something that s being handled lightly.
i said if elected i would serve in congress and no longer be a doctor. i want to honestly and genuinely praise you for that. it could be a difficult thing. it could have been the case that you did that and two years later you get voted out and you start from scratch again. your own admirable and above and beyond actions in this case are a pretty good standard for the man who is going to be the most powerful man in the united states with the most difficult job in the world. we know some of his closest advisers are his children and i suspect his kids, don and ivanka are studying this, and goodness knows they ve all got good lawyers. this is not something that s being handled lightly. i have not taukted to the president-elect about this or anything else, in fact, in the last three weeks. but i expect them to make the correct decision. he has said it over and over again. he s devoted to what he has chosen to do. it was a hard decision to make
you know, i have been so impressed with how they ve gone about the cabinet selection. yeah. i think he s listened to advisers. i think he s made studied decisions of the decisions that have been made. some people are frustrated because there s some other decisions that haven t been made. sure. but i think it s because he wants to have the information at hand before he actually enacts it. i m going to call the standard which i think is the standard that i think should be followed, the burgess standard. we ll get you back on the show. and i ll try to tilt it to the hayes/tildon conflict again. professor, we ve got a few things before us. one is there are some folks so in a strict statutory sense, it does seem to be the case that there is no statutory law that says the president has to divest. there are, however right. it has seemed some constitutional issues. how serious do you see those? i think they re very serious. the constitution specifies that