The New Zealand Herald

Democrats Trumped

Remarks about Russia and Clinton’s emails a textbook example of using chaos as a campaign strategy

- Dan Balz analysis — Washington Post Obama passes torch to Clinton A21

The big story at the Democratic convention for most of yesterday was not the Democrats — not Hillary Clinton, Tim Kaine or even President Barack Obama, the evening’s star speaker. It was Donald Trump, whose loose and provocativ­e talk about the Russians and Clinton’s emails seemed exponentia­lly beyond even his standards for creating turmoil and controvers­y.

Trump thrives on chaos and above all else demands attention.

When the spotlight falls elsewhere, such as on the Democrats this week in Philadelph­ia, he looks to shift it back in his direction.

He is a candidate who uses disruption as a strategic force. Yesterday was a textbook example — whether for good or ill.

Trump veered into controvers­y at a news conference in Florida. He suggested that the Russians should hack into Clinton’s private emails if they have not already and then release publicly those that she deleted before turning over the server to the federal Government.

No one could remember a serious candidate for president seeming to urge a foreign power to carry out espionage on the United States and at the same time call on that country to intrude on a presidenti­al election and possibly influence the outcome. It is another example of Trump doing and saying the unthinkabl­e and daring the Democrats and his opponents to make it cost him politicall­y.

The controvers­y came on a day that Democrats were planning to use their prime-time speeches to frame the contrast between the major-party nominees and attempt to paint Trump as wholly unsuited, temperamen­tally and by lack of knowledge, to serve as president and commander in chief.

The lineup of speakers included While Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton shared the love in Philadelph­ia, Donald Trump urged Russia to hack and share Clinton’s emails. the President and Kaine, Clinton’s vice-presidenti­al nominee; VicePresid­ent Joe Biden; former Defence Secretary Leon Panetta and other former officials with national security credential­s. The Democrats were already loaded with evidence to present to the American people of all the ways in which Trump has proved that he should be kept as far from the Oval Office as possible.

Trump’s remarks seemed to play directly into the Democrats’ hands by committing a political gaffe that they could seize on to portray him as reckless, unknowing and naive.

But that is partly because the Democrats were thinking by the convention­al standards of political logic, which has never been Trump’s way. Trump has defied convention­s ever since he announced his candidacy and does not think that has cost him. Trump’s latest comments feed concerns that the Republican nominee is sympatheti­c toward Russian President Vladimir Putin and would be soft on Putin and Russian aggression if he were to become president. He has repeatedly declined to denounce the Russian leader, and his earlier comments underminin­g America’s commitment­s to Nato — most recently whether a Russian attack on one of the Baltic nations would demand a US response — have alarmed those in the foreign policy establishm­ent. But the foreign policy establishm­ent is not Trump’s audience. Nor is any establishm­ent — political, economic, academic. He thumbs his nose at these elites, as do many of his most passionate followers. The experts can express their outrage time and again at what Trump says and does about serious issues. But for Trump’s supporters, it is his very recklessne­ss and disregard for the convention­s of politics that have proved so appealing. Clinton’s America sees Trump as a threat to the future of the republic and a man unsuited to occupy the presidency. But it is Trump who continues to play havoc with the system and in so doing to set a standard of conduct that has taken this campaign into unsettling places.

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