Dayton Daily News

Trump presidency becoming increasing­ly irrelevant

- Robert Reich He is former U.S. Secretary of Labor and is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley.

Announceme­nt: Donald Trump is no longer the president of the United States.

Oh, sure, he has the title and the bully pulpit — from which he’s bullying everyone from NBA players to people protesting white supremacis­ts to DACA kids.

But he’s not actively governing the United States. That work is happening elsewhere — in Congress, the courts, the Fed, the states. Or it’s not happening at all.

It’s not just that Trump lost the epic battle to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. Trump never understood the Affordable Care Act to begin with and played no part in developing Republican alternativ­es.

The budget Trump submitted to Congress earlier this year was dead on arrival. House Republican­s ignored Trump’s request for $54 billion in cuts to department­s and agencies and decided instead to cut non-defense spending by just $5 billion, and explode the defense budget.

The nine-page tax plan that Trump and congressio­nal Republican­s unveiled last week only vaguely resembles Trump’s original tax proposal, and all the important decisions have been left to the tax-writing committees of Congress. Trump’s relations with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan have become so strained that McConnell and Ryan have no interest in looping Trump into policies before they have to.

Meanwhile, Trump has run out of Obama executive orders he can declare voided. Major regulation­s, such as the EPA’s Clean Power Plan, can’t just be repealed. They have to go through a legal process that could take years.

Trump doesn’t seem to be aware of this. He told a cheering crowd in Alabama recently that he had ended the Clean Power Plan by executive order. “Did you see what I did to that? Boom, gone.”

Nope. The EPA will soon reveal its strategy for reversing the plan, but whatever it is, environmen­tal groups are almost certain to appeal it in the courts. Big businesses and utilities, fearing that the courts may rule against the administra­tion, are lobbying the EPA to come up with a replacemen­t rather than try to eliminate the plan altogether.

Top echelons of department­s and agencies are still empty. Trump has said “in many cases, we don’t want to fill those jobs,” which means decisions are being made by career civil servants and industry lobbyists.

By the start of September, more than a third of the leadership positions at the Federal Emergency Management Agency were still vacant. Not a good way to begin hurricane season. Puerto Rico, anyone?

As of mid-September, out of 599 key government positions that require Senate confirmati­on, Trump had made only 159 nomination­s, according to The Washington Post. Trump had yet to submit nomination­s for 320 positions.

Don’t get me wrong. Trump is still a dangerous showman and con man — tweeting condemnati­ons of critics and ranting before friendly crowds at his never-ending campaign rallies. He continues to fuel bigotry and meanness. He has reduced America’s standing in the world. His outbursts could start a nuclear war.

But when it comes to the actual work of governing America, Trump is becoming utterly and completely irrelevant.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States