Boston Herald

Trump’s tossed-off tweets may drive allies away

- By JONAH GOLDBERG Jonah Goldberg is a senior editor at National Review and a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

The political class is still coming to grips with what appears to be Donald Trump’s novel management philosophy: Government by Twitter. Put aside the bynow-familiar weirdness of our president-elect’s gloating over Arnold Schwarzene­gger’s poor “Celebrity Apprentice” ratings or swipes at Meryl Streep. Trump’s Twitter addiction poses heretofore unnoticed challenges for his administra­tion.

The president-elect often emphasizes the value of being “unpredicta­ble.” And he has a point — in certain contexts. Keeping our enemies guessing has advantages. Defenders of Trump’s habit of jabbing corporatio­ns about their offshoring decisions will tell you that Trump is “setting the tone from the top.” Since such decisions are often made with a narrow cost-benefit calculus, the argument goes, so using tweets to encourage executives to err on the side of “America first” is a valuable way to change the business culture.

Whether you like Trump’s economic reasoning, you can see why he likes keeping CEOs afraid of the crack of his Twitter whip.

But what about his own appointees and allies in Congress?

When I’ve talked to veterans of the Ronald Reagan administra­tion, particular­ly the speechwrit­ing or policy shops, I’ve often heard a common observatio­n. Knowing what the boss believed was both empowering and efficient. If you know a policy or a line in a speech will never fly with the president, you won’t bother pursuing it.

Peter Robinson, the acclaimed speechwrit­er, has written at length about how knowing Reagan’s vision made his job easier. Robinson could write “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!” because he knew it was what Reagan wanted to have happen.

“Ronald Reagan’s writers were never attempting to fabricate an image, just to produce work that measured up to the standard Reagan himself had already establishe­d. His policies were plain. He had been articulati­ng them for decades.”

The vast literature on leadership and management hammers away on this point: Provide a vision and then let the troops do the hard work. Jack Welch, the legendary former CEO of GE, put it this way: “In order to lead a country or a company, you’ve got to get everybody on the same page and you’ve got to be able to have a vision of where you’re going.” Gen. Bernard “Monty” Montgomery said that his “own definition of leadership is this: the capacity and the will to rally men and women to a common purpose and the character which inspires confidence.”

Except for trade policy, there are few areas where Trump’s troops have a clear idea of exactly what the boss wants, and his compulsive tweeting adds a layer of unpredicta­bility. I’ve talked to half a dozen committed and principled conservati­ves considerin­g jobs in the administra­tion, and I heard one recurring concern: “Will Trump have my back?”

The point isn’t about personal loyalty, but resolve in the face of the inevitable political and media backlashes that will come with any serious reform effort.

Consider two recent incidents. The U.S. House GOP caucus voted to sharply curb the power of the Office of Congressio­nal Ethics. Contrary to some opportunis­tic statements by House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (DSan Francisco), there’s bipartisan consensus that the OCE is a hot mess. Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, led an effort to scrap it, knowing that the GOP would take a political hit for doing so. When the predictabl­e firestorm hit, Trump hied to Twitter to mock the effort as a distractio­n, earning a nanosecond of favorable coverage by killing the initiative.

A more crucial example is the effort to repeal Obamacare. Last week, Trump issued a series of Twitter fatwas saying that Congress shouldn’t do anything that lets Democrats off the hook for the problems of Obamacare.

Politicall­y, I think Trump is right to be concerned about the perils of repealing Obamacare without having a replacemen­t ready. But his glib response elicits fear among some conservati­ves that he won’t stand fast on repealing Obamacare, or much else. There are countless areas — entitlemen­ts, civil rights, immigratio­n, etc. — where serious conservati­ve reforms will spark controvers­y, horrible headlines and negative coverage on “the shows” the presidente­lect watches obsessivel­y. Will Trump impetuousl­y use Twitter to triangulat­e against his own troops?

Right now, Trump’s defenders wave off such concerns, saying he’s using Twitter to communicat­e a clear vision to his team and the whole country. Time will tell. To me, that seems like a generous reading between the lines — or between tweets about Meryl Streep.

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