The Citizen (Gauteng)

Trump’s new reality TV show

PR Gambit: President puts his best foot forward FILMING WHITE HOUSE POLICY DEBATES FOR THE PUBLIC RUFFLES US SENATORS

- Washington

In a case of reality TV meets Washington, President Donald Trump is bringing television cameras into normally private White House talks with lawmakers that feature sharp debates and, seemingly, policy-making on the fly.

The meetings make Trump look engaged and interested, countering critics who have questioned his mental acuity, but they have done little to advance policy.

Democrats, who keep attending despite seeing few actual results, increasing­ly question whether these sessions are merely a repackagin­g of Trump’s star turn on The Apprentice, a TV show he hosted for 14 seasons.

“It’s always good to talk, but it strikes me as a presidenti­al show more than anything,” Senator Sherrod Brown, a Democrat who attended a trade meeting with Trump, said.

“The problem is the president agreed with everything everybody said when I was there. We were saying opposite things sometimes,” Brown said.

At a meeting about gun laws on Wednesday, Trump presided over a free-wheeling discussion and endorsed stricter gun regulation­s than Republican­s typically support. So, will that lead to anything?

Senator Dick Durbin, the No 2 Senate Democrat who was present for a similar meeting with Trump about immigratio­n, advised caution.

“Don’t be surprised if he changes his mind in 48 hours,” Durbin said.

People close to Trump said the idea of opening up such meetings lets him transmit his message directly to the public and contrast his style with that of Republican­s and Democrats from Capitol Hill.

“He comes out of 15 years of a reality TV show, and part of the show is, you show every aspect of your business activities,” said Chris Ruddy, a Trump friend. “It’s great. He has US senators as his cast.”

Still, that cast is aware that the cameras are rolling, which can affect how they behave.

“They’re a useful way to make news, they’re not a useful way to negotiate policy,” said Republican strategist Charlie Black about the open discussion­s, adding that participan­ts were less likely to negotiate seriously on live TV.

A White House official said the decision to open up the typically private meetings was “100% Trump”.

Trump was pleased when the press stayed for the meeting on immigratio­n and decided, at least for some meetings, to continue the practice.

“He loved it, he thought it was fabulous. He said ‘that worked out well, let’s do more of that’,” the official said.

Since that gathering, Congress has failed to pass any immigratio­n legislatio­n, and Trump’s own legislativ­e proposal was trounced in the Senate.

Republican lawmakers, who have had to correct or clarify Trump’s policy positions at such confabs in real time with cameras rolling, like their Democratic colleagues have had to get used to discussing policy positions publicly. Then there is the follow-through. “The upside is that it’s fascinatin­g television. It actually shows Trump in an authentic and real-life situation where he’s trying to hash out policy,” aid Republican strategist Ryan Williams, a former spokespers­on for one-time presidenti­al candidate and current Senate candidate from Utah Mitt Romney.

“The downside is they turn into events that are wildly off script from generally accepted Republican Party policy, and he rarely follows up on the items that are discussed in the meetings,” Williams said.

Matt Dallek, an associate professor of political management at George Washington University, said the meetings were “fundamenta­lly deceptive” because Trump frequently espouses views in front of the cameras that “he has not held previously and that he does not stick with”.

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? Guess who?
Picture: AFP Guess who?

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