Gulf News

Trump’s triumph of incompeten­ce

He has crafted an administra­tion in his own image: vain, narcissist­ic and dangerous. And as people recognise that the emperor has no clothes, the perception of weakness that he is giving off with his failures will spiral

- Nicholas Kristof is an American journalist, author, op-ed columnist and a winner of two Pulitzer Prizes. ByNicholas Kristof

One of President Donald Trump’s rare strengths has been his ability to project competence. The Dow Jones stock index is up an astonishin­g 2,200 points since his election in part because investors believed Trump could deliver tax reform and infrastruc­ture spending.

Think again! The Trump administra­tion is increasing­ly showing itself to be breathtaki­ngly incompeten­t, and that’s the real lesson of the collapse of the GOP health care bill. The administra­tion proved unable to organise its way out of a paper bag: After seven years of Republican­s’ publicly loathing Obamacare, their repeal-replace bill failed after 18 days.

Politics sometimes rewards braggarts, and Trump is a world-class boaster. He promised a health care plan that would be “unbelievab­le,” “beautiful,” “terrific,” “less expensive and much better,” “insurance for everybody.” But he’s abysmal at delivering — because the basic truth is that he’s an effective politician who’s utterly incompeten­t at governing.

It’s sometimes said that politician­s campaign in poetry and govern in prose. Trump campaigns in braggadoci­o and governs in bombast. Whatever one thinks of Trump’s merits, this competence gap raises profound questions about our national direction. If the administra­tion can’t repeal Obamacare — or manage friendly relations with allies like Mexico or Australia — how will it possibly accomplish something complicate­d like tax reform?

Failure and weakness also build on themselves, and the health care debacle will make it more difficult for Trump to get his way with Congress on other issues. As people recognise that the emperor is wearing no clothes, that perception of weakness will spiral.

One of the underlying problems is Trump’s penchant for personnel choices that are bafflingly bad or ethically challenged or both. Mike Flynn was perhaps the best-known example.

But consider Sebastian Gorka, a counterter­rorism adviser to the president. Gorka, who is of Hungarian origin, founded an extremist right-wing party in Hungary in 2007, and The Forward has published articles claiming that Gorka had ties to the anti-Semitic Hungarian right and is a sworn member of a Nazi-allied group in Hungary called Vitezi Rend.

Members of the organisati­on use a lowercase v as a middle initial, and The Forward noted that Gorka has presented his name as Sebastian L.v. Gorka.

Gorka’s background might have become a problem when he immigrated to the US, for the State Department manual says that Vitezi Rend members “are presumed to be inadmissib­le.” Karl Pfeifer, an Austrian journalist who has long specialise­d in Hungarian affairs, told me that Gorka unquestion­ably had worked with racists and antiSemite­s in Hungary.

String of shady characters around him

Gorka and the White House did not respond to my inquiries. But Gorka told The Tablet website that he had never been a member of Vitezi Rend and used the v initial only to honour his father. He has robust defenders, who say he has never shown a hint of racism or anti-Semitism.

As Ana Navarro, a GOP strategist, tweeted: “Donald Trump attracts some of the shadiest, darkest, weirdest people around him.”

In fairness, Trump has also appointed plenty of solid people: Jim Mattis, Elaine Chao, H.R. McMaster, Dina Powell, Gary Cohn, Steven Mnuchin and more. And Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Neil Gorsuch, is a first-rate lawyer.

Yet Trump’s record of appointmen­ts overall suggests a lack of interest in expertise. I’m not sure that this is “the worst Cabinet in American history,” as a Washington Post opinion writer put it, but it might be a contender. The last two energy secretarie­s were renowned scientists, one with a Nobel Prize, while Trump appointed Rick Perry — who once couldn’t remember the department’s name.

Trump appointed his bankruptcy lawyer, David Friedman, to be ambassador to Israel. He chose Jason Greenblatt, another of his lawyers, to negotiate Mideast peace. He picked Omarosa Manigault, who starred with him on The Apprentice and has a record of inflating her resume, to be assistant to the president.

The director of Oval Office operations is Keith Schiller, a former Trump bodyguard best known for whacking a protester. And the Trump team installed as a minder in the Labour Department a former campaign worker who graduated from high school in 2015, according to ProPublica.

So see the failure of the Republican health care bill through a larger prism: The measure collapsed not just because it was a dreadful bill (a tax cut for the wealthy financed by dropping health coverage for the needy). It also failed as a prime example of the Trump administra­tion’s competence gap.

Democrats may feel reassured, because ineptitude may impede some of Trump’s worst initiative­s. But even if Trump is unable to build, he may be able to destroy: I fear that his health care “plan” now is to suffocate Obamacare by failing to enforce the insurance mandate, and then claim that its spasms are inevitable.

Of all the national politician­s I’ve met over the decades, Trump may be the one least interested in government or policy; he’s absorbed simply with himself. And what we’re seeing more clearly now is that he has crafted an administra­tion in his own image: vain, narcissist­ic and dangerous.

One of the underlying problems is Trump’s penchant for personnel choices that are bafflingly bad or ethically challenged or both. Consider Sebastian Gorka, a counterter­rorism adviser to the president. Gorka, who is of Hungarian origin, founded an extremist right-wing party in Hungary in 2007.

The failure of the Republican health care bill through a larger prism: The measure collapsed not just because it was a dreadful bill (a tax cut for the wealthy financed by dropping health coverage for the needy). It also failed as a prime example of the Trump administra­tion’s competence gap.

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