Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

No recklessne­ss, and a platform

- RAMESH PONNURU Ramesh Ponnuru is a Bloomberg View columnist.

Donald Trump has inspired two sets of doubts among Republican­s: charactero­logical and ideologica­l. Conservati­ves feared that he lacks the maturity and self-discipline to be a good president and that he does not believe in what we do.

In his speech to Congress, he temporaril­y put the first set of questions on hold and showed the political power of a sober version of his unconserva­tive political philosophy.

Trump called on U.S. allies to pull their weight and said his job was not to represent the world—but he did it while praising rather than trashing NATO. He talked, as he rarely does, about our Muslim allies, too. He opened with a condemnati­on of violence and threats of violence against racial and religious minorities that would be unremarkab­le from any other president, but sounded unifying coming from him.

Just as notable was what Trump didn’t do. He didn’t promote his family’s business interests, or settle scores, or call anyone an enemy of the people. He called ISIS, rather than the New York

Times, evil. Having spent much of the last two years lowering the bar for himself, Trump cleared it in his speech to Congress.

Republican­s in the audience were obviously relieved. But they were cheering for a very different speech than most of them would have given.

Trump didn’t even pay lip service to social conservati­sm or to cutting total federal spending. Instead he talked up infrastruc­ture spending, protection­ism and child-care subsidies. He said nothing about financing his ambitious agenda. Maybe Chelsea Clinton will get it paid for when she’s president.

People who like Trump’s ideologica­l heterodoxi­es say a more convention­al Republican would not have won the election. Maybe they’re right; or maybe a standard-issue Republican would have won with a slightly larger and different electoral coalition (as I suspect).

Whether or not Trump’s stands on spending and trade helped him, though, they certainly did not do much to hurt him.

And when Trumpism is shorn of the recklessne­ss that usually accompanie­s it, it can be a pretty strong platform for a president— as Trump showed in his effective, expensive speech.

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