Waterloo Region Record

Analysis: Trump won’t change

Perish the thought he will change behaviour before Nov. 8

- Julie Pace

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump will not change.

He may surround himself with new staff and even listen to their advice for a while. He may stick to a scripted, more measured message if it looks to be working.

But he’ll always be the man who can’t let go of a grudge, whether it’s with a judge who ruled against him or a military father whose son was killed fighting for the United States overseas.

He’ll always be the man who embarrasse­d a young beauty queen about her weight, then defended his comments two decades later when Hillary Clinton raised them in a debate. And the man who on Friday — just 38 days away from potentiall­y being elected president of the United States — deepened his highly personal criticism of former Miss Universe Alicia Machado in a pre-dawn Twitter tirade.

“Did Crooked Hillary help disgusting (check out sex tape and past) Alicia M become a U.S. citizen so she could use her in the debate?” Trump wrote in a message timestampe­d 5:30 a.m.

Some voters may applaud Trump’s moves. Some may prefer his stubborn refusal to censor himself. Enough voters may ultimately elect him president.

But Trump’s pattern of abrasive behaviour has left him deeply unpopular with many Americans, particular­ly women and minorities, who hold significan­t sway in presidenti­al elections. If Trump does win in November, he’ll have to figure out a way to lead a country where many people believe he’s racist, sexist and uncivil.

Most Republican leaders long ago gave up hope that Trump would make a full-scale pivot into a more palatable politician in the general election. But they’ve still found ways to rationaliz­e their support for him, to look past his most volatile moments and offensive rhetoric.

Some Republican­s hinge their hopes on a belief that if Trump is elected president, he’ll surround himself with high-quality experts to help guide his decision-making. House Speaker Paul Ryan and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, both of whom have their own designs on the White House, argue a Trump presidency would at least give them a chance of implementi­ng conservati­ve legislatio­n in Congress, while a Clinton White House would be nothing more than an impenetrab­le roadblock.

But Republican­s might also worry that Clinton’s ability to get under Trump’s skin so easily has provided a blueprint that world leaders like Russia’s Vladimir Putin could use to rile him as president. And they should have no illusions that the brash businessma­n can control his belligeren­t behaviour and avoid offending many Americans. Look at his history. Trump’s decades in the public eye are littered with examples of long-held grudges with business associates and demeaning comments about women. One of his first moves after clinching the Republican nomination was to start a feud with U.S. District Court Judge Gonzalo Curiel, claiming his Mexican heritage made him biased against Trump in a legal case. Trump emerged from the party convention­s this summer locked in an ugly fight with Khizr Khan, an American Muslim whose son was killed serving the U.S. Army in Iraq.

The latest controvers­y came at one of the most critical stages of the campaign — on the debate stage in front of a televised audience of 84 million people and with early voting already underway in some states. Trump struggled in Monday night’s debate to fend off Clinton’s criticism of comments he made about Machado two decades earlier. When Clinton accused him of calling the former Miss Universe “Miss Piggy,” he said, “Where did you find this? Where did you find this?”

Rather than let the matter go, he defended himself the next morning, apparently blind to how offensive his comments seemed.

“She gained a massive amount of weight,” said Trump, who owned the pageant at the time she won. “It was a real problem. We had a real problem.”

Surely by week’s end, Trump was aware that his criticism of Machado risked damaging his campaign and giving Clinton fresh fodder to argue that he is too thin-skinned to serve as commander in chief. That made his decision to keep the story alive Friday and deepen his denigratio­n of Machado all the more perplexing.

“Using Alicia M in the debate as a paragon of virtue just shows that Crooked Hillary suffers from BAD JUDGEMENT! Hillary was set up by a con,” Trump wrote in one of three early morning messages about the Venezuelan-born Machado, who is now an American citizen.

Clinton advisers can hardly believe their good fortune as the race barrels toward the finish line. “When something gets under Donald’s thin skin, he lashes out and can’t let go,” Clinton wrote in her own Twitter message Friday. “This is dangerous for a president.”

 ?? C.M. GUERRERO, TNS ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump greets the small crowd at the Miami Dade College Koubek Center in a town hall style meeting this week in Miami, Fla.
C.M. GUERRERO, TNS Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump greets the small crowd at the Miami Dade College Koubek Center in a town hall style meeting this week in Miami, Fla.

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