National Post

TRUMP: A LEADER LIKE NO OTHER

The U.S. president is a man of his time, whose time has come.

- CONRAD BLACK Excerpted from Donald J. Trump: A President Like No Other by Conrad Black. © 2018 by Conrad Black. Reprinted by permission of Regnery Publishing. All rights reserved.

TRUMP ISN’T VERY REMINISCEN­T OF FRANKLIN OR JEFFERSON OR FDR OR NIXON OR REAGAN; BUT HE IS A MAN OF HIS TIMES, AND HIS TIME HAS COME.

In an excerpt from his latest book, Conrad Black says now that Donald Trump has reduced most peoples’ tax burden, relieved the fear that recession and unemployme­nt are just around the corner, and adopted a foreign policy of prudent and effective realism, Americans will likely and rightly judge him a success.

Those who oppose Trump generally do not understand how desperate and disgusted almost half of Americans are at the most inept 20-year streak of presidenti­al misgovernm­ent in American history that preceded the 2016 election. These decades of fruitless war, bone-cracking recession, humanitari­an disasters, collapsing alliances, oceanic deficits, and the erosion of economic growth and private sector industrial investment to a third or a quarter of levels under Ronald Reagan, could rattle any American’s patriotic self-confidence. Trump is a throwback to Reagan in that he rejects the chic defeatism of the establishm­ent; and despite all the media and Democratic Party and Never-Trump calumny of him, his political program is essentiall­y convention­al, moderate, conservati­ve wisdom lifted in large part from the policy recommenda­tions of thoroughly respectabl­e conservati­ve think-tanks such as the Heritage Foundation. Trump speaks to Americans fearful of decline. He wants, as his slogan says, to make America great again.

To those unaffected by the decline of America, that decline was invisible; to those who were affected by it, it is a challenge and a constant fear for their own welfare and national pride. The Democrats have had no policy for some years except to denigrate their opponents, and try to bribe and anesthetiz­e a comatose lumpenprol­etariat addicted to state benefit. Their nomination of Hillary Clinton showed that they did not realize

how many Americans rejected this vision of America.

The great majority of antiTrump activity in the first year of his administra­tion was devoted to the propagatio­n of falsehoods, which were then justified by the selective and intentiona­l misinterpr­etation of Trump’s careless and ambiguous statements. Distaste for Trump’s straight-shooting and sometimes vulgar style caused otherwise intelligen­t people to withhold any benefit of the doubt, and pathologic­ally to interpret anything he said or did in the worst possible light. He is not, in fact, a racist, sexist, warmonger, hothead, promoter of violence, or a foreign or domestic economic warrior. No opposition can continue on this name-calling basis alone for much longer than this one has.

Every two weeks in the first year of his term a new alarm was raised, and all quickly fell silent. In a calmer atmosphere, the faddish frenzies will become rarer and shorter. For two weeks in August, Confederat­e statues were being taken down all over the South, but now such iconoclasm happens only intermitte­ntly; the abrupt terminatio­n of famous careers for alleged sexual liberties that once happened on a daily basis has become much less frequent. Trump’s opponents are tenacious but unimaginat­ive and they have yet to seem to prepare for the possibilit­y, now more of a likelihood, that he might be a durable and effective president.

The Democrats committed all their energy to proving their assumed self-evident propositio­n that Trump could not win, then that his victory could be undone, and then that it could be vitiated by scorched-earth obstructio­n, or destroyed completely by investigat­ions and indictment­s. Now that Trump has reduced most peoples’ tax burden; relieved the fear that recession and unemployme­nt are just around the corner (in fact provided a booming economy); and adopted a foreign policy of prudent and effective realism that has smashed and scattered ISIS, persuaded China to cooperate against North Korea’s nuclear program, and defended American interests; Americans will likely and rightly judge him a success, despite his lapses of suavity. He has been chronicall­y underestim­ated, as a nonstarter for the Republican nomination until he clinched it; unelectabl­e until he was elected; and likely to be impeached until the investigat­ions faded and his accusers were engulfed in suspicion.

Trump is unpredicta­ble and somewhat erratic, and his stridency and ill-tempered outbursts are not what Americans expect of their presidents. But there is nothing unconstitu­tional, or even irrational about his use of social media and his aggressive tendency to counteratt­ack (sometimes preemptive­ly). This has been his only available method of surmountin­g dishonestl­y partisan and hostile media. The presidency is what its occupants make of it. No president smiled much or took to the airwaves or used airplanes or held frequent news conference­s before Franklin D. Roosevelt. Some of Trump’s techniques may be emulated by successors. If his policies succeed, so will he. And much more of his histrionic­s are just tactical then his hard-core critics imagine.

Donald Trump is not a blundering reactionar­y, but a battlehard­ened veteran of very difficult businesses full of unethical people (and he is no eagle scout himself). He is a very tough and an almost demiurgica­lly energetic man. His personalit­y is so startling and at times garish that there is a large section of the population that will not warm to him. But if his persistenc­e brings continued success, he will accede to the support of the majority.

It was always the case that, in making billions of dollars, surmountin­g an acute financial crisis, being a great television star instantly and for fifteen years, revolution­izing the nature and potential for celebrity and seizing control of a great political party in his first real try at politics, Donald Trump accomplish­ed more before he was president than had any prior president of the United States except Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Grant, and Eisenhower. His exterior is uneven, but his history is one of astounding accomplish­ment.

The strange mélange of Donald Trump’s virtues and weaknesses is unique in U.S. presidents. He genuinely loves the American people, but he has not always been above trying to peddle them his version of snake oil. He is contemptuo­us of most of the American financial and social elites as unmeritocr­atic snobs, who abuse their positions, misgovern the country, and bilk the people. He admires strength and respects earned success in every field.

Trump has promoted Americanis­m over the atomizatio­n of identity politics. His pursuit of America’s national interest— with no evangelica­l or Wilsonian notions of purifying other countries—has been successful to date. His unquenchab­le energy, gifts as a popular tribune, sheer entertainm­ent talent, and raw toughness have served him well.

Trump has learned something about how to gain and hold the respect that is naturally available to the chief of state, and the country has somewhat got used to him. There are markedly fewer malapropis­ms, there have been no bungled foreign initiative­s, fewer indiscreti­ons, his economic program is working, and his enemies are largely a tired coalition of character assassins and hacks uttering antique class-war claptrap on autocue, or affecting a false and complacent superiorit­y.

On the subject of Donald Trump, righteousn­ess can be overdone, and often is; he has, as has been recounted, his inelegant aspects. But Benjamin Franklin’s role in persuading Britain to expel France from Canada and fifteen years later in persuading France to help expel Britain from America was the ultimate demonstrat­ion of the art of the deal. Some of Jefferson’s more florid passages in the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce are among history’s greatest exposition­s of truthful hyperbole. In internatio­nal relations, Richard Nixon was a chess player and Ronald Reagan a poker player, and both were very successful. Trump seems more of a pool shark, but it seems likely he will do well too. Trump isn’t very reminiscen­t of Franklin or Jefferson or FDR or Nixon or Reagan; but he is a man of his times, and his time has come.

With President Trump, no setback is admitted or accepted; for him, rebuffs are really victories, disguised victories, moral victories, or the preludes to victories. Hyperbole, truthful and otherwise, is his common parlance. He speaks for the people, he has been a very successful man, and he has repeatedly outwitted his opponents, which is why he is attacked with such snobbery, envy, and spitefulne­ss. But America is reversing its decline and wrenching itself loose from the habits of lassitude, elitist decay, appeasemen­t of foreign enemies, and domestic inertia. His record is impressive; his foibles are not durably relevant.

Whatever happens, Donald Trump will be one of the most vividly remembered presidents and characters of American history. Difficult though it may be to believe at times, the office of the presidency, in that astonishin­g, ineluctabl­e, and fateful American way, may have sought the necessary man again.

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 ?? SCOTT OLSON / GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump speaks to supporters at a campaign rally on Thursday in Elkhart, Indiana.
SCOTT OLSON / GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump speaks to supporters at a campaign rally on Thursday in Elkhart, Indiana.
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