The New Zealand Herald

Never has US elected one so unsuited to top office

- Bryan Gould comment

Donald Trump is by no means the first US president to take office with no prior experience of holding political office. Dwight D. Eisenhower, for example, became president after a stellar career in the military, though his military service no doubt gave him some familiarit­y with the concept of public service.

Trump, however, is unusual in taking office with only the experience of pursuing his own self-interest to guide him — “and a very good thing too” many of his supporters will no doubt say.

But, however appealing may be the prospect of a president unencumber­ed by political baggage, the lack of any political or government­al experience can be just as much a handicap for a new president as would be a similar absence of relevant experience in any other field of endeavour that requires judgment, knowledge and understand­ing.

Politics in a democracy is essentiall­y about carrying people with you. It requires an ability to persuade and compromise, to recognise “the public interest” is more than the simple aggregatio­n of individual interests.

The absence of relevant experience is one thing, the continuing impact of inappropri­ate and unhelpful experience quite another. The fact that Trump’s life has been dedicated to his own selfadvanc­ement leads to concern that he is not just lacking the necessary qualities but that he is actually handicappe­d as he takes office, by allowing his experience to have taught him the wrong lessons.

The early indication­s, even before his inaugurati­on, are not encouragin­g. He has already been exposed, by some immediate and pressing issues, as being ill-prepared for the major responsibi­lities that will soon become his.

It was surely unwise, and unlikely to build confidence, to have parted ways so publicly with his providers of intelligen­ce.

His rejection of the briefing he has been given by the FBI, and the breakdown of relations between them, means that the US no longer has an accepted and reliable source of informatio­n about the activities of hostile interests — and the fact that the rejected briefings involve President Putin and Russia can only increase anxieties about the role they may have played in Trump’s election.

And his child-like susceptibi­lity to flattery, so expertly exploited by Putin, is far from desirable in the man to whom the free world entrusts its future.

The nature of the allegation­s made against him — that the Russians have “compromisi­ng” material of a sexual or financial nature or both that could be used to blackmail him — and his difficulty in shaking himself free of this story, show how much his public image has already been damaged by what he revealed about himself during his election campaign.

There can be few who have ascended to high office under such a cloud of their own making.

In domestic politics, too, he has already shown himself to be less than sure-footed.

He seems to have struggled to comprehend that running the country is different from running his own businesses and that the two must be separated — indeed, it isn’t clear that he sees any difference between them.

There is also, of course, the persistent impression — not helped by his continued refusal to publish his tax returns — that those businesses are in trouble and that they owe vast sums of money. His record in business does not help. It is one marked by risky borrowing, followed by repeated bankruptci­es, leaving the burden of unpaid debt to be borne by the lenders — hardly likely to inspire confidence if (as he advocates) the same practices are applied to the management of the public finances.

And, in the appointmen­ts he has made to some of the most important offices in his Administra­tion, he seems to have followed the principle that the essential qualificat­ion is that the appointee has a record of opposition to the interests (such as climate change or an end to racial discrimina­tion) to be overseen.

Most worryingly, Trump’s life experience appears to have taught him that celebrity and headlines are all that matter and will cure all. It seems we are about to enter an era of government by Twitter.

A snap overnight response to some perceived slight is apparently to replace careful analysis and considered policy — and opponents and those who disagree with him are to be countered by insults and scant regard for the truth.

It is hard to see that such an impetuous and narcissist­ic approach to government can possibly succeed. It is even harder to discern the likely end point.

No American president, surely, has ever entered the White House so much behind the eight ball before he has even begun. Oh, American voters, what have you done?

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