Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The president’s new vision

- ISHAAN THAROOR

DAVOS, Switzerlan­d—For the first time in 18 years, an American president took center stage at the World Economic Forum. President Donald Trump’s speech in Davos was preceded by a lavish luncheon sponsored (of course) by the Saudis. He emerged into a packed hall alongside the forum’s founder, Klaus Schwab, and stood at attention as a Swiss marching band piped out a regional ditty.

Finally, after a somewhat-fawning preamble in which Schwab praised Trump for pushing through tax legislatio­n that benefited U.S. corporatio­ns, the president delivered a mostly mild address, insisting that “America First” did not mean “America alone” and that his country’s economic success was a boon to the rest of the world.

After days of almost feverish anticipati­on— indeed, in private, a few forum organizers complained of the media fixation over Trump’s appearance—the speech was a bit of an anticlimax. Apart from a veiled attack on China’s “state-subsidized” economic interferen­ce and a dig at the “nasty” press, which drew boos from the audience, Trump said little to stir controvers­y. In reaction to his allegedly racist rhetoric, a handful of attendees staged walkouts in protest.

On the whole, however, it was a speech made to a friendly and receptive audience. Dispensing with the blood-and-soil nationalis­m of his last major address in Europe, Trump instead framed his presidency as that of a deregulati­ng tax-cutting business titan. Many in the gathering of high-flying executives and financiers lapped it up.

“We can’t ignore the fact that the U.S. economy is booming,” said Khalid Al Rumaihi, the chief of the Economic Developmen­t Board of Bahrain. “I think his message was balanced and his message was positive for the global economy.”

Others were less impressed. Trump’s speech was anodyne—virtually every world leader who appears in Davos bills his or her nation as “open for business”—and offered little vision for the world as a whole.

There was one curious wrinkle in Trump’s remarks: He seemed to suggest that the United States could join the sort of multilater­al arrangemen­ts that he has consistent­ly railed against.

“There’s a subtle change in how he’s talking about trade,” Douglas Peterson, the CEO of S&P Global, told my colleagues. “That to me is the good thing about him coming to Davos. He’s meeting free traders, and he’s shifting a little bit.”

But given the erratic nature of Trump’s own messaging, it’s probably best not to infer all that much from his brief 15-minute cameo at the World Economic Forum.

“There were few surprises, if any,” said former U.S. diplomat John Negroponte to us. “There are two Trumps: the Twitter Trump and the teleprompt­er Trump. This was definitely the latter.”

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