Lethbridge Herald

Ignoring Trump

HOW TRUMP ADMINISTRA­TION IGNORES TRUMP: PRESIDENTI­AL DEMANDS SOMETIMES DISMISSED

- Alexander Panetta

Something strange has been happening lately in Washington when the most powerful man in town, the president of the United States, makes a headline-grabbing declaratio­n on some new policy. The recent response has been: Nothing. Some recent presidenti­al statements have been simply ignored, tuned out as meaningles­s noise by the federal apparatus he runs. Sunday provided the latest example of the Trump administra­tion ignoring Donald Trump.

It came after the president suggested at a partisan rally this week that the Justice Department should be investigat­ing his defeated election opponent: “What the prosecutor­s should be looking at are Hillary Clinton’s 33,000 deleted emails,” Trump told a crowd, prompting chants of, “Lock her up!’’

No way, said his deputy attorney general.

Rod Rosenstein not only rejected the idea that public statements from the president should be viewed as an order — he made clear that even if such an order were delivered explicitly more formally, in a private setting, he would refuse it as improper.

“No,’’ Rosenstein replied, when asked about the presidenti­al demand, in a Fox News interview. “I view what the president says publicly as something he said publicly. If the president wants to give orders to us in the department, he does that privately.’’

He went one step further: “The president has not directed us to investigat­e particular people. That wouldn’t be right. That’s not the way we operate.’’

That back-of-the-hand dismissal followed a similar event a few days earlier.

The president triggered an avalanche of attention with a headline-grabbing announceme­nt on Twitter: After consulting with his generals and military experts, the president said, the U.S. military would no longer accept or allow transgende­r people.

The blunt, clear statement prompted questions about what procedures might be implemente­d; what would happen to the transgende­r people already serving; what financial conditions might apply to any discharges; and whether the order might be fought in court.

But then a considerab­le wrinkle developed: The military said it wasn’t happening.

I view what the president says publicly as something he said publicly. If the president wants to give orders to us in the department, he does that privately. – Rod Rosenstein – Deputy attorney general

It shrugged off the announceme­nt from its commander-in-chief. In an internal communicat­ion published by Politico; a statement issued by the Secretary of Defence; and in an exchange with reporters, the military made clear it did not view Trump’s statement as official policy.

“What you saw in the form of a tweet represente­d an announceme­nt,” Navy Capt. Jeff Davis told Pentagon reporters, according to the Washington Examiner. “Orders and announceme­nts are different things, and we are awaiting an order from the commander-inchief to proceed.”

One well-connected military official, chatting off the record, said this discord could occur in the most urgent, life-and-death matters. If the president issued an ill-advised order for a military strike, against North Korea or elsewhere, he predicted the military might push back under a four-word justificat­ion: “If it’s not legal.’’

That definition of an illegal order, he said, might include a military strike that doesn’t get congressio­nal authorizat­ion. He said there was already widespread anxiety last spring, among military brass, over the order for a limited strike against Syria. That order was ultimately carried out. But the Syria issue has also offered examples where administra­tion officials have cited policies different from the president: Vice-President Mike Pence, and UN ambassador Nikki Haley, have taken anti-Russia, anti-Assad, pro-regime-change positions at odds with the president’s.

“There’s a certain amount of dysfunctio­n,’’ conservati­ve writer Ramesh Ponnuru of the National Review told an ABC talk panel Sunday.

“The Pentagon seems to be basically ignoring the president’s tweet (on transgende­r people). And that’s not something that’s just isolated to the Pentagon. The vice-president seems to have his own Russia policy ... Attorney-General Sessions, not doing what the president wants him to do in terms of prosecutin­g or investigat­ing Hillary Clinton.

“There’s a question on the part of subordinat­es in this administra­tion of how seriously they should take the utterances of this president.’’

Some of those glaring public difference­s have fuelled speculatio­n that different Republican­s are seeking to build their own political resumes. A weekend article in The New York Times suggested different Republican­s were even planning the possibilit­y of running in 2020, in case the president doesn’t.

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