Chattanooga Times Free Press

TRUMP WIELDS A POPGUN IN THE BATTLE OF WIT

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Humor can be a powerful political weapon in skilled hands. President Donald Trump just showed that he needs to go back to basic training.

Trump rolled out his sense of humor Saturday night at the annual Gridiron dinner, where politician­s have competed for over a century for an unofficial Washington comedy crown. Presidents John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan were especially noteworthy for using Gridiron appearance­s to dazzle the city’s elite with their sharp and self-deprecatin­g wit.

Trump opened with a few good cracks about his hostile relationsh­ip with the press. “I’m ruining your evening in person,” he said.

And he didn’t exclude jokes at his own expense, or at least at the expense of his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, who just lost his top-secret security clearance. “We were late because Jared could not get through security,” Trump cracked.

The routine went downhill from there, tumbling across the line separating well-chosen gibes from crude insults. He called House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi “crazy.” He belittled his own vice president, Mike Pence, comparing him to the contestant­s on his former reality TV show and declaring, “I’m proud to call him the apprentice.”

Loyal Trump fans probably chuckled at their guy’s closing line mocking the many journalist­s in the room. He said the chance to address them gave him the most “fun I’ve had since watching your faces on election night.”

Trump is the 22nd president to speak in the forum, where the goal is to have fun at the expense of political rivals and oneself.

Most presidents see the event as an opportunit­y to score points.

“Humor can serve a lot of political goals,” said Jeff Nussbaum, a former White House speechwrit­er who often helps Democrats find their funny sides for these venues.

“It can increase likability by showing self-awareness. It can be a tool to diminish ongoing controvers­ies, or it can provide a memorable way to hammer home a serious point.”

Before his 1960 presidenti­al run, Kennedy was facing criticism that he was going to buy the nomination through his wealthy father, Joseph P. Kennedy. At the Gridiron dinner that year, he pulled out what he said was a telegram from his father and started to read: “Don’t buy a single vote more than necessary. I’ll be damned if I am going to pay for a landslide.”

More than two decades later, Reagan used his famous wit to defuse accusation­s that he kept too light a schedule. “They say hard work never killed anyone,” Reagan reminded the Washington movers and shakers. “But I figure, why take the chance?”

The two best humorist-politician­s since Will Rogers in the 1920s were not presidents, but members of Congress: Rep. Morris K. Udall of Arizona, a Democrat, and Sen. Alan Simpson of Wyoming, a Republican.

They were far apart ideologica­lly, but each appreciate­d the other’s mastery of humor.

Simpson was especially quick on his feet. When a constituen­t demanded to know his church preference, he shot back, “Red brick.”

And he knew how to make cutting fun of his own profession without insulting anybody. For example, he once noted that “about 15 percent” of most business people, churchgoer­s and country club members “are screwballs, lightweigh­ts and boobs.” Then the scalpel came out: “You would not want those people underrepre­sented in Congress.”

Udall, who died in 1998, once said he wanted to be buried in Chicago so he could “remain active in politics.”

Maybe the best of hundreds of Udall stories was one about the New Hampshire politician who was visiting an Arizona Indian reservatio­n right before re-election.

He promised the gathering that he’d get money for a new hospital on the reservatio­n. “Goomwah, goomwah,” the tribe enthusiast­ically responded. Then he vowed to build a new school. Again came the shouts of, “Goomwah, goomwah.”

The self-satisfied politician didn’t ask what “goomwah” meant, but he soon learned. As he headed toward the corral to accept a gift of a pony, the chief cautioned, “Be careful not to step in the goomwah.”

 ??  ?? Albert Hunt
Albert Hunt

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