Boston Herald

Trump has time to confound expectatio­ns

- By LARRY ELDER Larry Elder is a nationally syndicated radio talk-show host.

Despite the daily pounding he receives from the media, President Trump enjoys two advantages — low expectatio­ns and lots of time.

When the opposition party and their media cohorts call Trump an idiot, a fool, a liar, racist, sexist, homophobic, anti-immigrant, anti-Mexican, incompeten­t, lazy, unfocused, greedy, hateful, fascist, tyrannical and/or Hitler-esque, there’s really nowhere to go but up. Recall how immediatel­y after Trump took office, “experts” predicted a short administra­tion, perhaps of months-long duration. Critics said Trump did not really think he would win.

This brings us to Trump’s second advantage, time. There is a long time between now and November, let alone between now and the end of Trump’s second term. The piling-on in the first year and a half of the Trump presidency contradict­s a reality, quite annoying to Trump-bashers: The man is fulfilling one campaign promise after another.

The Obama administra­tion, for example, complained about our NATO partners’ failure to spend the expected amount on national security. After Trump loudly complained that only five of the 29 member nations spend the minimum NATO requiremen­t of 2 percent of their gross domestic product on defense, that America was being used and financiall­y ripped off by an “obsolete” NATO, which doesn’t fight terrorism, and that member nations need to “promptly pay their bills,” what happened? Several members pledged to increased their military spending.

How many Republican presidenti­al candidates over the years complained about the ban on drilling for oil in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, known as ANWR? Trump signed legislatio­n to begin the process of repealing the ban. Trump lowered the corporate tax rate, once the highest statutory rate in the industrial­ized world. Trump, as promised, eliminated or delayed numerous job-killing regulation­s. He approved the constructi­on of the Keystone XL and Dakota Access pipelines.

The stock market has repeatedly reached all-time highs, and for the first time in years, polls show that Americans believe young people’s lives will be better than their parents’. An April 2018 Gallup poll found 61 percent believe today’s youth “will have a better life than their parents did,” the highest mark since 2010.

When Trump derisively called North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un “rocket man,” critics practicall­y counted down our remaining days on earth before we would see mushroom clouds. As the only president ever with neither political nor military experience, Trump was called everything from a warmonger to naive.

President Trump, shortly after taking office, placed American aircraft carriers in the Sea of Japan. Three aircraft carriers and their multi-ship strike groups conducted war exercises in mid-November. Well, well. It was not long after this that Kim Jong Un became the first North Korean dictator to set foot on South Korean soil. Kim announced plans to end the 68-year-old Korean War and even promised to “denucleari­ze,” as Trump had demanded as a condition of removing economic sanctions.

Trump’s achievemen­ts are all the more impressive given that from the beginning of his presidency he has been under investigat­ion for allegedly “colluding” with the Russians to win the election. The investigat­ion has apparently evolved into an investigat­ion of lying to investigat­ors, obstructio­n of justice, money laundering and possible campaign finance violation over the $130G payoff to porn star Stormy Daniels.

There is an irony here. Many of the Trump-bashers cheering special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe also called the impeachmen­t of President Bill Clinton a “witch hunt.” To this day, many believe Congress impeached Clinton because of his extramarit­al affair in the White House with an intern. In fact, the House impeached him because he lied under oath and committed obstructio­n of justice. He was later found in contempt of court for lying. Former California Republican Congressma­n James Rogan was a House manager, one of the House members who agreed to prosecute Clinton in the Senate. Rogan, now a judge, said that had Congress done nothing to Clinton it would have set a precedent that a president can, without consequenc­es, lie under oath. And if a president can lie under oath, argued Rogan, why can’t any person justify or rationaliz­e lying under oath?

Had Clinton not been impeached, and had the precedent been establishe­d that presidents could lie under oath, Trump would have little to fear from a “perjury trap.”

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