Albuquerque Journal

Trump deserved the boos he caught at the ballpark

- EUGENE ROBINSON Columnist

WASHINGTON — It is President Donald Trump’s own fault that he got so lustily booed at the World Series game here Sunday night. When you publicly refer to people as “human scum,” they are likely to return the favor.

Trump looked surprised when his appearance at Nationals Park was greeted with catcalls and chants of “Lock him up!” After all, earlier in the day he had announced the killing of Islamic State monster Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in a U.S. Special Operations raid. Surely, he must have felt, he deserved kudos for that.

And indeed he does. Here they are: Sincere congratula­tions for ridding the world of a sadistic butcher who deserved his fate.

The problem is, though, that one battlefiel­d success did not erase 33 months of presidenti­al behavior that many, if not most, Americans consider outrageous and worthy of impeachmen­t. The smile and wave that Trump offered those baseball fans did not rescind the vicious, snarling rhetoric he spews on a daily basis, including his recent descriptio­n of Republican­s who oppose him as “human scum.” The flicker of vulnerabil­ity that played across Trump’s face when he heard all the booing probably softened few hearts, if any.

This is not a reality show like “The Apprentice” in which all is forgotten between episodes and alliances are formed or abandoned in the blink of an eye. Trump may not recall the abuse he heaped on perceived adversarie­s last week, last month or last year. Those on the receiving end, however, definitely remember.

I agree with those who say the office of the president deserves respect even if the person occupying it does not. But I add a caveat: The president himself must understand his relationsh­ip with the American people is one of service: He works for us. Every president I have met has spoken of how humbling the job is. Trump appears to see humility not as a gift, but as a weakness. If the president will not humble himself, the people must do it for him.

We’ve been here before. Back during the

Nixon administra­tion, it was possible to drive right past the White House on Pennsylvan­ia Avenue. As Watergate reached its crescendo, protesters would stand on the sidewalk holding signs that said “Honk if you want him impeached.” Motorists sent up such a cacophony that some were given $5 traffic tickets for “excessive noise.”

That’s the thing about democracy. People have a right to tell their leaders what they think of them. If your constituen­ts believe you have betrayed their trust, they’ll let you know.

If Trump was genuinely unprepared for the hostile reception, it might be because he is accustomed to the adulation of the crowds at his political rallies. The red baseball caps that the crowd wore Sunday night did not say “Make America Great Again.” They bore the curly “W” of the hometown baseball team and were worn mostly by residents of Washington and its suburbs, which constitute a Democratic stronghold. It has been a long time since Trump exposed himself this way in hostile political territory, and it may be a long time before he does so again. My guess is that he will put it down to eternal hostility on the part of “the swamp” or “the deep state.”

And that is a shame. “Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap,” says the King James version of the holy book Trump claims to read. We’ve seen no evidence of self-awareness from Trump, but we must keep hope alive.

There are those who will argue that treating Trump in this manner is a political gift to him — that it will fire up his loyal base by giving evidence to support his narrative of being unfairly victimized, in this instance by elite coastal baseball fans. My view is that Trump is going to inflame his base one way or another, no matter what his political opponents say or do. He obviously has no respect for the traditiona­l boundaries of civic debate. Those who seek to defeat him will not do so while ever-so-carefully walking on eggshells.

Yes, it is a sad day when the president of the United States cannot attend a World Series game without getting booed. It is also a sad day when the president mocks the Constituti­on, bulldozes all political norms and commits a host of impeachabl­e offenses. This may not be how we would like things to be, but it’s how they are.

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