Chattanooga Times Free Press

MUST SUPPORTERS LET TRUMP BE TRUMP?

- Jonah Goldberg

Like a passenger on a sinking ship, the president has been throwing one longstandi­ng position after another overboard like so much dead weight. His closest advisers, biggest boosters and some members of his family are at war with one another in a pitch battle to steer the president in their preferred direction. From balancing the budget to relations with Russia, each faction thinks it’s fighting for the president’s true conviction­s and the issues that got him elected. “Such incidents,” The New York Times put it, “indicate that the struggle for the president’s mind between two camps, pragmatist­s and purists, has intensifie­d.”

This might sound familiar. But that quote comes from 30 years ago. Then-New York Times reporter Steven Roberts was writing about the great battle between the Republican establishm­ent types and the true-believing conservati­ves who’d been with Ronald Reagan for decades.

The true believers had a rallying cry: “Let Reagan be Reagan!”

The phrase harks back to the earliest years of Reagan’s presidency.

James Watt, Reagan’s first secretary of the interior, said at a rally in 1982 the solution to all the problems facing the administra­tion was simple. “As I pondered that question from the depths of my soul, I felt these words,” Watt told the crowd. “Let Reagan be Reagan. Let Reagan be Reagan.”

In the last week, Donald Trump has found himself in a seemingly similar position. He has defenestra­ted large chunks of the agenda his biggest boosters insist got him elected. As Ann Coulter, author of “In Trump We Trust,” tweeted after the Syria attack, “Those who wanted us meddling in the Middle East voted for other candidates.”

Trump has embraced NATO, praised Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen, scrapped his tax plan, backed off his vow to eliminate the debt, reversed his claim China is a “currency manipulato­r,” came out in favor of the Export-Import Bank and lifted his freeze on federal hiring. He also seems to have relegated his senior adviser and chief ideologist, Steve Bannon, to a bit player, describing him as “a guy who works for me.”

I welcome most of these reversals, but it’s hard not to sympathize with those who feel betrayed. They made a simple mistake: They thought Trumpism was a coherent ideologica­l program, akin to Reaganism.

The problem is Trumpism is real, but it’s not an ideology. It’s a state of mind. Or, to be more accurate, it’s a constantly changing state of mind. Trump himself admits as much, saying that he won’t be bound by ideology or doctrine, preferring “flexibilit­y” not just on means, but on ends.

This should have been obvious by the way people used the phrase “Let Trump be Trump.” It’s usually used to scold the scolds who want Trump to be more “presidenti­al.”

In February, “Fox News Sunday” host Chris Wallace interviewe­d Dan Scavino, the man who handles the rhetorical nuclear football of this administra­tion, Donald Trump’s Twitter account. Wallace asked Scavino if he ever cautioned Trump against tweeting something. “There’s been times, but not too often,” Scavino replied. But, he added, “I’ve always believed, in being with the man from Day One, ‘Let Trump be Trump.’”

When conservati­ves said “Let Reagan be Reagan,” they were referring to a core philosophy that Reagan had developed over decades of study and political combat. When people said “Let Trump be Trump,” they meant let Trump’s id run free. The former was about staying true to an ideology, the latter about giving free rein to a glandular style that refused to be locked into a doctrine or even notions of consistenc­y.

That’s why saying “Let Trump be Trump” is almost literally the opposite of saying “Let Reagan be Reagan.”

Jonah Goldberg is an editor-at-large of National Review Online and a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

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