Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Trump presidency nears 100 days: Welcome to the real world

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If President Trump were starring in a new reality show — which, of course, he is — here’s a possible title: “The Real World.”

Washington is awash with commentary that the president is “moving to the center” and abandoning his conservati­ve principles for a more “moderate” posture pushed by son-in-law Jared Kushner and other New Yorkers who don’t share the heartland populism of Trump’s most ardent supporters.

In recent weeks, the president has swiftly altered his position on a range of topics: the relevance of NATO, trade relations with China and Mexico, the Federal Reserve, and the value of the Export-Import Bank, which finances American companies doing business abroad.

But to frame these changes as an ideologica­l shift, from the right to the center, misunderst­ands this president and his approach to politics.

He is not an ideologue. He has no fixed principles or goals, except to win, to make a deal, to enhance his own ego and reputation.

As he has often made clear, his business experience taught him to be a pragmatist, to consider the world as it is, not as it should be. And that practicali­ty is emerging as a core element of his presidency.

That’s why he’s marginaliz­ing advisers like Steve Bannon, a hard-eyed bomb-throwing nationalis­t who is clearly out of sync with Trump’s essential nature. And why he’s elevating business types like Kushner and former Goldman Sachs executive Gary Cohn, who share Trump’s basic worldview that you do what it takes to get the deal done.

The president’s pragmatic streak alarms and even enrages true believers, who thought they were promoting a kindred spirit. As one Bannon ally told The Wall Street Journal: “We didn’t elect Kushner to bring a New York establishm­ent mentality to Washington.”

This is Bernieism, but on the right: the willful self-delusion that this is somehow a revolution­ary country. In fact, thank goodness, this is a stable, centrist country that will celebrate the 241st anniversar­y of its last revolution this July.

Sure, Trump keeps employing overheated rhetoric on issues like immigratio­n and the media, but he’s never been a revolution­ary — or even a Republican. He’s a Trumpian, and true Trumpians recognize reality.

Take China. During the campaign, Trump bashed Beijing as a bad commercial partner and threatened a trade war to set things right.

Once in office, the world looks very different. The president’s discovered that he needs China, so he’s offering a bargain: You rein in North Korea, I’ll ease up on trade demands.

Or take NATO. Trump has now realized that for all his happy talk about Russia during the campaign, Moscow under Vladimir Putin remains an aggressive and expansioni­st power — and NATO exists for a very good reason: to check and balance that power. Once more, reality reigns.

Another instructiv­e example of Trump’s pragmatism is the Ex-Im Bank, which enjoyed bipartisan support for more than 80 years before tea party types started blasting it as an example of “crony capitalism.”

Candidate Trump — he of no fixed principles — adopted the line as a handy way to burnish his populist credential­s.

But corporate executives like Dennis Muilenburg of Boeing have told him the truth: the ExIm Bank is a valuable asset to America’s job-creating companies that want to compete in the global marketplac­e.

The president is still an impulsive, intemperat­e and unqualifie­d leader, but his lack of fixed principles could turn out to be an advantage. He seems willing to listen and learn, at least on some issues, and that’s a positive sign.

 ??  ?? Cokie and Steve Roberts Columnists
Cokie and Steve Roberts Columnists

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