By Rich Lowry
Friday, March 27, 2026
There are many things in American life that deserve our
suspicion and contempt, but plumbers aren’t among them.
Evidently, Jimmy Kimmel disagrees. The late-night host
took a shot at newly confirmed DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin, who used to run
a plumbing business, by saying, “We have a plumber now protecting us from
terrorism.”
The gibe was a setup for a line about Super Mario — the
Italian plumber starring in the Nintendo game — but the premise was that there
was something inherently ridiculous about a plumber ascending to a position of
major responsibility in Washington, D.C.
Yes, why couldn’t Markwayne Mullin have made something of
himself by getting, say, a law degree rather than devoting himself to a family
business involving nasty little things like pipes and joints?
One problem with calling Mullin a plumber is that it
drips — no pun intended — with condescension; the other is that it
significantly understates his business background, which involved leveraging a
small, struggling family concern into a mini-business empire in Oklahoma,
including a real-estate firm, construction company, and restaurant.
Anyone doubting the drive and acumen it takes to create
and manage such enterprises should try doing it himself.
Before ascending to DHS secretary, Mullin was the only
member of the U.S. Senate without a four-year college degree, which is
considered a demerit by the same kind of people who tend to look down on
plumbers.
But Mullin’s path is a familiar one for many Americans.
He was in college when his father fell ill, and he quit his studies to take
over the business. Was he supposed to shirk that responsibility and instead
complete, say, a degree in sociology or ethnic studies?
In the scheme of things, that Mullin was a U.S. senator
is greater reason to be suspicious or dismissive of him than that he once ran a
plumbing business.
No one who has had their life disrupted by some
disastrous leak is ever sad to see the plumber show up — it’s a little like how
someone who has chest pains must feel when seeing a cardiologist.
Plumbing requires problem-solving and attention to
detail, as well physical dexterity and stamina. A plumber often has to come up
with a hypothesis about an unseen problem, fashion a way to test it with
minimal disruption, and then undertake the work to fix it in close, suboptimal
spaces.
Years ago, I was moving my late mother out of the house
she had lived in for decades, and there was — perfect timing — a bad leak in
the basement.
A plumber showed up, a guy in his 20s, and while looking
around the cellar, he stopped and stared at the ceiling.
After a long, awkward silence, I asked, “What are you
doing?”
“Thinking,” he replied.
He was figuring out where the pipes likely were in the
ceiling, and which he should try to cut and join — a puzzle he couldn’t get
wrong without inadvertently doing damage and adding to the problem.
It should never be underestimated how plumbing, and other
trades, require considerable thought and analysis, even if they exist outside
the college-education industrial complex. Becoming a plumber takes years of
training, just not at a college campus; plumbers learn their craft during
on-the-job apprenticeships.
It’s a path that leads to well-compensated work. The
median salary of a plumber is about $62,000, while the median salary of all
U.S. workers is roughly $49,000.
That our culture nonetheless systematically undervalues
practical, hands-on skills and, instead, mindlessly valorizes the four-year
college degree is a disservice to all the talented Americans who work in the
trades; pushes people to get four-year degrees that they might not need and
will saddle them with student debt; and makes it harder to develop the workers
that manufacturers — including in the defense industry — are seeking.
In short, that we now have a cabinet secretary who is a
plumber is something to be welcomed rather than mocked.
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