The Press

Bolton book, ‘dreamers’ twin defeats for Trump

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Addressing throngs of adoring fans last June, President Donald Trump posited as undisputed fact that Article II of the Constituti­on gave him ‘‘the right to do whatever I want as president.’’

What a difference a year makes.

In less than 24 hours this week, Trump twice had the whistle blown on his moves to bust through the boundaries of law – twin defeats that forced him onto the political defensive just as he is trying to generate momentum for his flounderin­g reelection campaign.

The first whistle came in the form of John Bolton’s explosive memoir of his 17 months as Trump’s national security adviser, details of which were first reported on Thursday.

In his book, The Room Where It Happened, Bolton says Trump solicited help with his 2020 re-election from Chinese President Xi Jinping, something that would be against the law. This is one of many damning anecdotes the advisertur­ned-antagonist unspools to paint a portrait of Trump as a threat to the country and unfit for the presidency.

The second whistle came from the Supreme Court, which, in a stunning ruling yesterday, blocked a signature Trump administra­tion policy of ending the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals programme, which provides legal protection­s for undocument­ed immigrants known as ‘‘dreamers,’’ who were brought to the country as children.

Even though Trump proudly shifted the court’s ideologica­l orientatio­n to the Right with his nomination­s of two conservati­ve justices, it provided no accommodat­ion for the president. Chief Justice John Roberts Jr., who joined the court’s four liberals, wrote in the majority opinion that the administra­tion’s attempts to terminate DACA violated federal law and were ‘‘arbitrary and capricious.’’

Taken together, Bolton’s revelation­s and the Supreme Court’s rejection of a Trump policy that had been a central campaign promise amount to a stinging rebuke of Trump’s use of executive power.

‘‘It’s part of a pattern of lawless activity,’’ Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., the chairman of the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said.

‘‘The firings of inspectors general, the breaking of norms, rules, laws, constituti­onal oaths, American values – it’s a persistent and pernicious theme of this administra­tion.’’

An allegation of abuse of power was at the heart of House Democrats’ case to impeach Trump. Although Senate Republican­s acquitted the president at trial, supporters of his impeachmen­t said yesterday that he is getting his just deserts now, less than five months before the election.

‘‘It’s a good week for the rule of law and a bad week for people who think they’re above the rule of law,’’ said Joyce Vance, who was a US attorney in the Obama administra­tion. ‘‘Trump is finally being held accountabl­e . . . . The problem is we have a president who has demonstrat­ed that he fundamenta­lly doesn’t believe in democracy, doesn’t believe in our constituti­onal system of government.’’

Trump used his familiar arsenal to mount his defence. In late-night and early-morning tweets, he excoriated Bolton as a ‘‘wacko,’’ a ‘‘dope,’’ a ‘‘disgruntle­d boring fool’’ and a ‘‘sick puppy.’’

As for the Supreme Court, Trump said the ‘‘horrible & politicall­y charged decisions’’ of this week – presumably including Tuesday’s landmark ruling protecting gay and transgende­r people from workplace discrimina­tion – were ‘‘shotgun blasts into the face of people that are proud to call themselves Republican­s or Conservati­ves.’’

In a separate tweet, Trump asked, ‘‘Do you get the impression that the Supreme Court doesn’t like me?’’

The answer, according to former Nixon White House counsel John Dean III, is no.

‘‘Justices watch what’s going on in the world. They know we have an unstable leader. They see he’s not a force for stability in democracy,’’ said Dean, who famously testified against President Richard Nixon in Congress’ Watergate inquiry.

Assessing the fallout from the court’s DACA ruling and Bolton’s memoir, Dean argued, ‘‘This is a blow against Trump that has existentia­l implicatio­ns for his presidency, but it’s of the time . . . . Trump is becoming what he hates most, which is being a loser.’’

Trump’s polling deficit against former vice president Joe Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee, has grown in recent weeks in national and battlegrou­nd-state polls.

Trump and his campaign team hope to begin reversing that trend this weekend in Tulsa, where the president will return to the campaign trail to resume his megarallie­s, which were paused because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In December, the House voted to impeach Trump for pressuring the Ukrainian president to open an investigat­ion into the Biden family, a move that would have benefited Trump’s 2020 campaign. The Senate narrowly voted to acquit the president; only one Republican, Mitt Romney of Utah, joined the Democrats in voting to convict.

Bolton refused a subpoena to testify in the impeachmen­t proceeding­s and saved his account for his book.

Bolton writes that Trump’s alleged abuse of power to help his re-election extended beyond his dealings with Ukraine. On the sidelines of the June 2019 Group of 20 summit in Japan, Bolton writes, Trump turned a conversati­on with Xi to the coming US presidenti­al election and pleaded with the Chinese president to help ensure he would win.

‘‘He stressed the importance of farmers, and increased Chinese purchases of soybeans and wheat in the electoral outcome,’’ Bolton writes. ‘‘I would print Trump’s exact words but the government’s prepublica­tion review process has decided otherwise.’’

Trump, as he has with other accounts by former staffers, characteri­sed Bolton’s book as a work of fiction by a disgruntle­d former employee. But the president has not disputed any of the specific scenes detailed by Bolton.

‘‘Bolton’s book, which is getting terrible reviews, is a compilatio­n of lies and made-up stories, all intended to make me look bad,’’ Trump tweeted yesterday morning.

‘‘Many of the ridiculous statements he attributes to me were never made, pure fiction. Just trying to get even for firing him like the sick puppy he is!’’

Historian Douglas Brinkley said this week’s developmen­ts stand out in an already extraordin­ary presidency.

‘‘I think Donald Trump has finally gotten his comeuppanc­e,’’ Brinkley said. ‘‘Right now, he is a grounded vessel, trapped by Covid-19, by the social justice movement, by the Supreme Court saying he circumvent­ed the law, and by Bolton saying that he’s an idiot – and maybe a treasonous one.’’

‘‘It’s a plague of locusts around Trump,’’ Brinkley added. ‘‘They’re piling up and starting to break his spine.’’ – Washington Post

 ?? AP ?? A copy of The Room Where It Happened, by former national security adviser John Bolton, is photograph­ed at the White House yesterday. Insets: President Donald Trump, top, and former national security adviser Bolton, bottom.
AP A copy of The Room Where It Happened, by former national security adviser John Bolton, is photograph­ed at the White House yesterday. Insets: President Donald Trump, top, and former national security adviser Bolton, bottom.

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