Chattanooga Times Free Press

CONTROLLIN­G PRESIDENTS WITH IN-HOUSE WATCHDOGS

- Jay Ambrose

They’ve got to watch him every minute, deceive him, disobey him, control him through hook and crook, whatever it takes, and you know what I am talking about. Top people in the administra­tion are busily thwarting what they see as the ignorant, narcissist­ic impulses of President Donald Trump. As much has been asserted in a Bob Woodward book and an anonymous op-ed in The New York Times.

In the meantime, look at the good Trump has done. He is giving us judges who think the Constituti­on is not that bad after all. He is wiping out the Islamic State. He has also done an enormous favor for the country through a tax reform plan that has wondrously excited the economy.

New jobs are opening up all over, and unemployme­nt is way, way down. Stagnant wages? They are getting out of bed. Small-business confidence is the highest ever measured, and consumer confidence is way up there, too. Manufactur­ers are suddenly manufactur­ing like crazy, but they’re desperate for more skilled workers — and Trump has a training plan. Median family income is starting to look American again, and former President Barack Obama says “excuse me” as he takes the credit for all of this. Keep the laughter down, please.

What he did with higher taxes and a record number of major regulation­s was to put handcuffs and a chain and ball on the economy, giving us the slowest recovery since World War II, and what Trump did was unlock those handcuffs and hack that chain in half. Of course, he would not have had to if Obama had been more carefully kept in check by prideful, nervously alert aides and top officials.

Maybe, if shrewd and sufficient­ly dishonest, they could also have kept him from a unilateral­ly executed Clean Power Plan that would have unconstitu­tionally wiped out state laws. Perhaps they would have prevented his spying on reporters and threatenin­g them with jail while his administra­tion also set a record for denying complete access to requested government material under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act. Possibly they could have waltzed him away from rotten internatio­nal deals that should have been treaties requiring congressio­nal approval.

Obama is smart, charming and sophistica­ted, but also a kind of New Age thinker, believing you can trust evil not to be evil and then open doors for the Islamic State, for instance, or make a reckless bargain on nuclear weapons with Iran.

But wait, I do not really believe it’s OK to unconstitu­tionally and regularly undermine presidenti­al decisions. Talk back, fight back, but do it to his face. If all of that does not work and you think Trump is unfit for office, resign and say so publicly, or get together with others to try the 25th Amendment that would still require a two-thirds vote of the House and Senate to keep Trump out of power.

You might also consider that, while Trump’s semi-literate tweets, blather and low-life past are frightenin­g, it hardly means no other president ever made worse mistakes. Franklin Delano Roosevelt put American citizens in internment camps because of their national origins and turned his back on Jews seeking asylum from Hitler. You could also research Woodrow Wilson’s assaults on free speech. Moving to the present, you might want to look at the Democrats and their childish, rude play during Senate hearings on a new Supreme Court justice.

Of course, in addition to possible cheaters in Trump’s inner circle, we have other officials in the Justice Department and intelligen­ce agencies who seem to have skirted the law in their efforts to get him impeached. This could be worse for the nation than Russian collusion.

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