The Manila Times

The Porter debacle confirms Trump’s incompeten­ce

- Washington­Post STEVE CHAPMAN CREATORS.COM SteveChapm­anblogsath­ttp://www.chicagotri­bune.com/news/opinion/chapman.Follow himonTwitt­er@SteveChapm­an13oratht­tps:// www.facebook.com/stevechapm­an13.

ENGLISH monarchs are often known by their names and their most conspicuou­s traits, from William the Conqueror and Richard the Lion-Hearted to Bloody Mary and Edward Longshanks. If presidents followed that custom, the incumbent could borrow his title from the medieval king Ethelred, going down in history as Donald the Unready.

President Trump has an assortment of grave streak of racial and religious bigotry, thin skin, and consuming narcissism. But no characteri­stic dominates this administra­tion more thoroughly than his fundamenta­l incompeten­ce.

The case of staff secretary Robert Porter is damning not just because of his importance in the White House but because his record of domestic abuse elicited scant notice or concern from his superiors. It stemmed from a series of failures by multiple staffers and ended in a debacle.

As the reported, “Porter was kept in a key role in which he had access which articles and policy proposals made it to the aware for months of at least some of the serious allegation­s against him.”

When more informatio­n about the allegation­s of violence came to light, chief of staff John Kelly staunchly defended him. It took a shocking photo of one ex-wife with a black eye to force the

staff, Reince Priebus, and continued under his second, Kelly. Neither did the due diligence that should have occurred when his security clearance didn’t come through— or else they didn’t think the allegation­s were any big deal. They either failed to inform themselves or didn’t act on what they learned. It was just the latest from a president who is a master of the own goal.

Priebus, notorious for his inability to impose order on Trump’s schedule, visitors or decisionma­king process, eventually got the ax. Kelly has proved the wisdom of past chiefs who did their best to stay out of the limelight. Nearly every time he has voiced his opinions—on the Civil War, on treatment of women, on the “dreamers”—he has sounded like a callous fool. The serious mistakes the two have made speak volumes about Trump’s judgment in hiring them.

No White House in memory has generated out: national security adviser Michael Flynn, chief strategist Steve Bannon, labor secretary nominee Andrew Puzder, press secretary Sean Spicer, communicat­ions director-designate Anthony Scaramucci, counterter­rorism adviser Sebastian Gorka, Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price and public liaison Omarosa Manigault Newman.

If Trump had his way, Attorney General Jeff Sessions would also be gone, and possibly Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. Most of his departed appointees left with their reputation­s, not necessaril­y sterling at the start, in ruins.

Brookings Institutio­n fellow Kathryn Dunn double that of Ronald Reagan, who had the second-highest rate.

Many of those who have stayed are not exactly an advertisem­ent for Trump’s executive savvy. His Middle East envoy, Jared Kushner, got the job by marrying the boss’s daughter—and still doesn’t have a security clearance. Ben Carson is about and Urban Developmen­t as he is to teach ballet.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke opened up nearly all of the East and West coasts to offshore drilling, only to clumsily backtrack to make an exception for Florida Gov. Rick Scott, a Republican running for re-election. Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen told a Senate committee she didn’t know whether Norway is predominan­tly white.

Trump’s blunders have alternated between tragedy and farce. His administra­tion could have been invented by comedy writers as an uproarious departure from reality. But trash

A corporate chief executive who exhibited such mystifying priorities and rampant sloppiness, as well as a penchant for bad hires and constant turmoil, would be evicted without delay. But anyone so badly prepared to be a CEO would

The president brings to mind what the 19thcentur­y British statesman Benjamin Disraeli said when he was told that one colleague was out of his depth. “Out of his depth? He’s 3 miles from shore!” When Trump sinks, he may take us all with him.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines