Khaleej Times

Trump’s wrong choices could ruin the country if he wins

- Elizabeth Drew Elizabeth Drew is the author, most recently, of Washington Journal: Reporting Watergate and Richard Nixon’s Downfall.

Donald Trump, the US Republican Party’s presidenti­al nominee, has again shaken up his campaign organizati­on In doing so, he is revealing more about himself and his so-called management style than he may want people to see. Few presidenti­al campaigns have featured such evident chaos and churn in personnel. Two people who have never run a presidenti­al campaign, and whose political instincts contradict each other’s, are now running Trump’s operation.

Kellyanne Conway, his new campaign manager, is a pollster who has been mining survey data from the mainstream Republican right for years (the party’s right wing is its “mainstream,” because its center is essentiall­y gone). During the Republican primary, she worked for the “super PAC” that backed Trump’s bitter rival, Ted Cruz. Conway is a smart, tough partisan who is expected to be a steady and sensible influence in the campaign. If she prevails – and Trump can stick to a theme – we’ll see a more reasonable Republican candidate.

On the other hand, Trump’s decision to appoint Steven Bannon as his campaign CEO foretells anything but steadiness and sensibilit­y. Prior to his appointmen­t, Bannon was the executive chairman of Breitbart News, a farright, hyper-nationalis­t – indeed white supremacis­t – online publicatio­n. He is known to be a combative nihilist who will stoop to any depth to win.

Bannon’s appointmen­t caused mainstream Republican jaws to drop. Trump, trailing Hillary Clinton badly in August polls, has come under growing pressure to move closer to the Republican Party establishm­ent. Unless he adopts a more mainstream approach, he will not be able to attract white suburbanit­es – a key constituen­cy still up for grabs.

But Bannon is no fan of the Republican establishm­ent. Under Bannon, Breitbart News routinely assailed Republican Speaker of the House Paul Ryan. Earlier this summer, it attacked Ryan for supporting an omnibus spending bill that funds President Barack Obama’s Syrian refugee program, and for sending his children to a private Catholic school. It even backed Ryan’s Wisconsin congressio­nal primary opponent, a Trump supporter whom Ryan defeated in an 84-16% landslide.

Breitbart News also condemned the Republican Senate leader, Mitch McConnell, publishing a column that accused McConnell of being soft on Clinton to remain in the good graces of donors who oppose Trump.

What has the Conway-Bannon dichotomy produced? Early signs suggest that Conway is sanding down some of Trump’s rougher edges. For example, Trump, who never apologizes, recently expressed vague “regret” for offending people. More important, Trump has been moving away from his tough anti-immigratio­n stance, such as his pledge to establish a special “deportatio­n force” to round up all 11 million undocument­ed immigrants in the US. What Trump is moving toward, however, remains unclear, as is whether his supporters will let him get away with this shift.

By contrast, Bannon apparently wants to “let Trump be Trump.” He seems to support Trump’s refusal to “pivot” from the divisive rhetoric of the primary season to a more “presidenti­al” approach. Presumably, he hopes to free Trump to follow his basest instincts, spewing vile invective against Clinton as the election contest heats up. That won’t go down well with the constituen­cy that Conway is trying to win over to Trump.

There is little reason to think Trump’s new staffing arrangemen­t will yield a new, more coherent candidate. Throughout the campaign, he has vacillated wildly between poise and pugilism, sometimes in the same day.

Trump’s appointmen­t of Bannon, in particular, suggests that he is desperate, scared, and lost. Although it still isn’t clear how much Trump actually wants to be president, we know that he hates to lose.

And yet he doesn’t seem to understand the basics of presidenti­al politics, nor the difference between the primary season and the main event. He still boasts that he defeated all of his Republican opponents, though, given how the primary process works, it’s easier to beat 16 rivals than one or two.

Trump also confuses the enthusiast­ic supporters who attend his rallies with the presidenti­al electorate. He seems not to comprehend that what he says to his ardent fans is heard by a much larger, and less sympatheti­c, public. This is a key reason why his poll ratings were plummeting by mid-August. And so he did what flailing candidates often do: he shook up the staff.

Bannon replaced Paul Manafort, who was close to the elites Bannon despises, and who had tried to strengthen Trump’s ties to them. Manafort made

Throughout the campaign, he has vacillated wildly between poise and pugilism

the major misstep of trying to compel Trump to change, and of telling mainstream Republican­s that he could manage the candidate. Even politician­s without Trump’s outsize ego would bridle at such talk.

By the time Manafort was replaced, Trump was ignoring his advice, and Manafort had essentiall­y given up. In the meantime, Manafort’s past as an adviser to and lobbyist for unsavory dictators around the world was catching up with him. In one instance, he had worked for former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, a proxy for Russian President Vladimir Putin who fled to Russia after being driven from power in 2014.

The US Justice Department has now started to scrutinize Manafort’s lobbying activities in the US on behalf of Yanukovych, which posed yet another threat to the campaign. The 2016 presidenti­al election isn’t over, so it’s still possible that Trump could end up in the White House. His poor judgment in people, glaringly apparent in recent weeks, is yet another reason why that is a dangerous possibilit­y for American democracy.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates