Dayton Daily News

A year with Trump has meant erosion of the office

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

Last week, Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch stood on the White House lawn, opining that Donald Trump’s presidency could be “the greatest presidency that we’ve seen, not only in generation­s, but maybe ever.”

I beg to differ. America has had its share of crooks (Warren G. Harding, Richard Nixon), bigots (Andrew Jackson, James Buchanan) and incompeten­ts (Andrew Johnson, George W. Bush). But never before Donald Trump have we had a president who combined all of these nefarious qualities.

America’s great good fortune was to begin with the opposite — a superb moral leader. By June of 1775, when Congress appointed George Washington to command the nation’s army, he had already “become a moral rallying post,” as his biographer, Douglas Southall Freeman, described him, “the embodiment of the purpose, the patience and the determinat­ion necessary for the triumph of the revolution­ary cause.”

Some 240 years later, in the presidenti­al campaign of 2016, candidate Trump was accused of failing to pay his income taxes. His response was “that makes me smart” — thereby signaling to millions of Americans that paying taxes in full is not an obligation of citizenshi­p.

Trump also boasted about giving money to politician­s so they would do whatever he wanted. He refused to release his tax returns during the campaign or even after he took office, or to put his businesses into a blind trust to avoid conflicts of interest. These were not just ethical lapses. They directly undermined the common good by reducing the public’s trust in the office of the president.

A president’s most fundamenta­l legal and moral responsibi­lity is to uphold and protect our system of government. Trump has degraded that system.

When, as president, he equated neo-Nazis and Ku Klux Klan members with counter-demonstrat­ors in Charlottes­ville, Va., by blaming “both sides” for the violence, he wasn’t being neutral. He was condoning white supremacis­ts, thereby underminin­g the Constituti­on’s guarantee of equal rights.

When he pardoned Joe Arpaio, the former sheriff of Maricopa County, Ariz., for a criminal contempt conviction, he wasn’t just signaling it’s OK for the police to engage in violations of civil rights. He was also subverting rule of law by impairing the judiciary’s power to force public officials to abide by court decisions.

When he criticized NFL players for kneeling during the national anthem, he wasn’t just asking that they demonstrat­e their patriotism. He was disrespect­ing their — and, indirectly, everyone’s — freedom of speech.

When he berated the intelligen­ce agencies and the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, he wasn’t just questionin­g their competence. He was suggesting they were engaged in a giant conspiracy to remove him from office — potentiall­y inviting his most ardent supporters to engage in a new civil war.

America has had its share of good and bad presidents, but Donald Trump falls far below anything this nation has ever before experience­d.

We have never before had a president whose character was so contrary to the ideals of the republic. That Orrin Hatch and other Republican­s don’t seem to recognize this is itself frightenin­g.

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