Ben Carson credits his mother for teaching him to reject government assistance, the former surgeon wrote in his 2015 book, even though she "occasionally" did accept some public aid: "She did not think that receiving public assistance was a good thing, and she constantly drilled into both my brother and me the need to work hard and to become self-sufficient citizens." It was that industriousness and a flash in the political zeitgeist that launched Carson's political career. In 2013, at the National Prayer Breakfast, he stood by President Obama and slammed his health care law, instantly becoming a conservative darling. Pushed by grassroots support, he decided to run for President. After a brief stint atop the early GOP primary polls, he dropped out of the race in March 2016, endorsed Donald Trump one week later and swore he would return to the private sector. So when Trump announced his plan to nominate the former surgeon for HUD Secretary, experts in the field scratched their heads. For all his talk of the evils of welfare, the actual mechanics of housing policy have never been one of Carson's passions, let alone an area of expertise. "For me, success is not how many people we get into public housing, but how many we get out," he told TIME at a Baltimore elementary school in June. "How many people do we give the life skills that will allow them to be independent?" The question is whether a leader with no experience in government or housing can construct policies that deliver on that promise. Read the full story on TIME.com. Photograph by Stephen Voss (@stephenvoss) for TIME

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Ben Carson credits his mother for teaching him to reject government assistance, the former surgeon wrote in his 2015 book, even though she "occasionally" did accept some public aid: "She did not think that receiving public assistance was a good thing, and she constantly drilled into both my brother and me the need to work hard and to become self-sufficient citizens." It was that industriousness and a flash in the political zeitgeist that launched Carson's political career. In 2013, at the National Prayer Breakfast, he stood by President Obama and slammed his health care law, instantly becoming a conservative darling. Pushed by grassroots support, he decided to run for President. After a brief stint atop the early GOP primary polls, he dropped out of the race in March 2016, endorsed Donald Trump one week later and swore he would return to the private sector. So when Trump announced his plan to nominate the former surgeon for HUD Secretary, experts in the field scratched their heads. For all his talk of the evils of welfare, the actual mechanics of housing policy have never been one of Carson's passions, let alone an area of expertise. "For me, success is not how many people we get into public housing, but how many we get out," he told TIME at a Baltimore elementary school in June. "How many people do we give the life skills that will allow them to be independent?" The question is whether a leader with no experience in government or housing can construct policies that deliver on that promise. Read the full story on TIME.com. Photograph by Stephen Voss (@stephenvoss) for TIME


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