Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

An unsustaina­ble presidency

- Ruth Marcus Columnist

So much for the notion that the second 100 days would be calmer or more reassuring.

As April drew to a close, and with it the artificial marker of the first 100 days of the Trump presidency, it was possible to conjure a relatively comforting scenario: It could have been worse.

After all, President Trump launched his administra­tion with the dangerous duo of Michael Flynn as national security adviser and Steve Bannon ascendant. The 100-day period ended with Flynn fired, Bannon diminished, and the new national security adviser, H.R. McMaster, joining forces with Defense Secretary James Mattis to provide a protective buffer against presidenti­al impulsiven­ess.

Meantime, notwithsta­nding atrocities like the immigratio­n orders and the House health care plan, Trump backed away from some of his most jarring and irresponsi­ble campaign-trail promises and rhetoric, from declaring NATO “obsolete” to labeling China a currency manipulato­r to moving the U.S. Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem.

A 70-year-old man does not change his character or basic approach. Still, the immense responsibi­lity of the presidency molds its inhabitant. Thus, it was possible to detect some glimmers of maturation and even learning. Health care turned out to be more complicate­d than anyone knew. Heartbreak­ing photos of dead Syrian children killed by chemical weapons managed to evoke previously unseen empathy.

In resolutely optimistic moments, you could imagine a White House whose learning curve would continue an upward climb, however gradual and episodic, in which the New York moderates — Jared Kushner, Ivanka Trump, et al. — would elbow aside the America Firsters. No longer. True, the institutio­ns of American government and society have proved relatively robust.

The courts and the media have risen to the constituti­onal occasion; Congress not so much, and mostly because intramural GOP dysfunctio­n has so far prevented the worst from being legislated.

But Trump himself is turning out to be the full-fledged disaster of our worst fears. He understand­s nothing and is uninterest­ed in learning anything — not just the dreary substance of things like tax reform but constituti­onal values, governing norms, and America’s unique role in the world.

He sees things only through the distorting prism of an allconsumi­ng ego. There is only one Trump instinct — “fight, fight, fight,” he said at the Coast Guard Academy — and one Trumpian dichotomy: friend or foe.

He is impervious to embarrassm­ent, no matter how blatant his falsehood. The stain of his behavior spreads to taint anyone within range.

The past few weeks have presented an alarming parade of proof. Authoritar­ianism? Trump summarily fired his FBI director over “this Russia thing” — after, according to reports, James Comey resisted Trump’s demand that he pledge loyalty and declined Trump’s importunin­gs to drop the Flynn probe.

Trump met unapologet­ically with yet another a dictatoria­l thug, Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and remained shamefully silent as Erdogan’s security goons beat up protesters on U.S. soil.

Overweenin­g egotism laced with self-pity? Trump used the occasion of the Coast Guard graduation to lament his treatment — “No politician in history — and I say this with great surety — has been treated worse or more unfairly.”

Similarly, in the Trumpivers­e, the Russia inquiry and the newly named special counsel represent “the single greatest witch hunt of a politician in American history.”

Dangerous ignorance and lack of preparedne­ss for his post? Without evident forethough­t, heedless of considerat­ion of the consequenc­es, classicall­y boastful, Trump blurted out codeword informatio­n about the Islamic State to the Russians at his Oval Office yuck-fest. The national security and diplomatic establishm­ent shudders at the thought of this man at loose abroad.

It is impossible to know how this disastrous episode in our history will conclude, or how grave the damage.

But an adage from conservati­ve economist Herb Stein comes to mind: If something cannot go on forever, it will stop. This situation does not feel sustainabl­e for a full four years.

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