The New Zealand Herald

America must not sink to Trump level

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The man who promised to make America great is making America very nasty. The greatest challenge for those opposing this President is not to sink to his level of rude and vindictive politics. That is a challenge that has eluded some Americans over the past week. Donald Trump’s Secretary of Homeland Security, Kirstjen Nielsen, was hounded from a restaurant by protesters and the White House press secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, was refused service in a restaurant whose owners did not want her there.

These things do not happen in mature democracie­s. No matter how impassione­d political arguments become, protagonis­ts normally recognise each other as people with personal rights that ought to be respected. Nielsen might not be well known outside Washington DC but Huckabee Sanders appears on television conducting White House press briefings just about every day. She serves an impulsive, inconsiste­nt President given to abusive tweeting and absurd assertions of fact. She does her best to put a reasonable face on it all with profession­alism and patience.

Both women are doing a job somebody needs to do and do not deserve to be subjected to personal insults in their private lives. To be refused service in a restaurant by owners of the opposing political view is stark evidence of how deeply America has been divided by Trump. It was divided before, of course, that was how such an unusual candidate came to power. But his behaviour from the moment he took the oath of office has been designed to deepen the wound.

He knows the more he disgusts and antagonise­s the half of the country who did not vote for him, the more he appeals to the half that did. He has managed to polarise American politics so that he now dominates the Republican Party much more than he did before the 2016 election. Republican­s in Congress are at risk of losing their seat in party primaries if they oppose him and better Republican­s, such as House majority leader Paul Ryan, are retiring at the mid-term elections in November.

If the Democratic Party is to win control of the House in November and find a candidate who can beat Trump in 2020, it will not be by descending to his level. House minority leader Nancy Pelosi struck the right note, criticisin­g the restaurant owners’ refusal to serve the White House press secretary as “predictabl­e but unacceptab­le”. Her colleague, Congresswo­man Maxine Walters, went the other way, telling a crowd, “If you see anybody from that Cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you create a crowd and you push back on them.”

That, of course, was up Trump’s alley. He called her “an extraordin­arily low IQ person” who had “just called for harm to supporters . . . ” and had “become, together with Nancy Pelosi, the face of the Democrat Party”. That mix of insult, falsehood (implying she called for physical harm) and unfair smear of Pelosi by associatio­n, is his style. Americans need to raise their sights to make their politics great again.

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