In the two weeks since Donald Trump’s unexpected election victory, Trump Tower in New York City has emerged as the epicenter of his transition efforts and a literal revolving door for potential Cabinet picks. But despite the overwhelming scrutiny facing Trump’s White House team, the president-elect has reportedly adopted a remarkably informal approach to naming appointees, in stark contrast to the disciplined process used by his predecessors. Instead of carefully vetting the people he is considering for his Cabinet and other top administration positions, Trump has doled out appointments in mere days’ time, apparently without a thorough review of candidates’ backgrounds or financial records.

Trump’s laissez-faire approach to assembling his government continued Wednesday morning with the appointment of South Carolina governor Nikki Haley as the United States ambassador to the United Nations and, the day before, the rumored offer of Housing and Urban Development to retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson. Reports that both Haley and Carson were tapped to serve in the incoming administration emerged less than one week after a swarm of potential Cabinet appointees descended upon Bedminster, New Jersey to meet with the president-elect.

Haley is somewhat of an odd pick, given both her lack of foreign policy experience and her long history of personal clashes with Trump. A daughter of Indian immigrants, Haley was an outspoken critic of the New York billionaire during his campaign. And while the governor eventually conceded that she would vote for the Republican nominee—despite the fact that she was “not a fan”—the relationship between the two was far from amicable. The South Carolina governor once said that the former reality TV star is “everything a governor doesn’t want in a president” and did, at one point, publicly disavow him. Trump, for his part, fired back at Haley, deriding her immigration stance as “weak.”

Carson’s rumored offer is unusual for a separate set of issues. Despite having no government experience—a fact that Carson himself worried would put him in a position to “cripple the presidency,” according to his longtime friend and business partner Armstrong Williams—Carson told Neil Cavuto on Tuesday that he had “multiple offers on the table” from the president-elect. When the Fox News host pressed the former surgeon on whether he had been offered the Housing and Urban Development appointment, in reference to Trump tweeting he was “seriously considering” his onetime rival for the position, Carson responded, “That was one of the offers on the table.” And when asked about his qualifications, Carson responded, “I know that I grew up in the inner city and have spent a lot of time there.” Having treated patients in urban areas, Carson reasoned, he would be well-positioned to oversee the nation’s urban policy.

Haley and Carson’s appointments, like those of Jeff Sessions as attorney general, Reince Priebus as chief of staff, and Mike Flynn as national security adviser, are the latest in a series of nominations that seem to reflect a combination of Donald Trump’s impulses to reward loyalty and build a cabinet out of “central casting”—the phrase that Trump has reportedly used to describe both the sturdy-jawed, Midwestern Mike Pence and the high-born Mitt Romney, whom Trump is reportedly considering to lead the State Department. (The “impressive” General James Mattis, a “true General’s General,” Trump wrote on Twitter on Sunday, may be his pick for Secretary of Defense.) Perhaps Haley and Carson, too, fit the bill.