Dayton Daily News

Trump heads for vacation; summer crises looming

- By Jonathan Lemire

— Now is the summer NEW YORK (vacation) of the president’s discontent.

As Donald Trump left Friday for his annual August holiday at his lush New Jersey golf club, he was confrontin­g a storm of crises, at home and abroad, that could set the course for his re-election bid.

With his poll numbers stalled and his ability to rally the country questioned, he’s being tested by a China trade war that may slow the economy, rising tensions with both Iran and North Korea and, in the aftermath of the two weekend mass shootings, pressure to act on guns and face accusation­s of his own role in fostering an environmen­t of hate.

The dark clouds are converging as Trump’s bid for a second term takes on new urgency. he exudes confidence but as the two dozen Democrats eager to take his job sharpen their attacks, the White House — or, for the next 10 days, the clubhouse in Bedminster, New Jersey — will have to mount a multifront effort rooted in maintainin­g his base rather than trying to expand it.

“There are often presidents facing reelection who face an onslaught,” said Douglas Brinkley, presidenti­al historian at Rice University. “Those are the times when you need to heal the nation’s wounds or make your case for a real change. But Trump long ago decided that he was going to try to be a president who divided and conquered to intimidate friend and foe alike.”

Unlike other embattled incumbents at this point in their terms, Trump does not face a serious primary challenge. His grip on the GOP has warded off insurgenci­es like Ronald Reagan’s challenge to Gerald Ford in 1976 or Pat Buchanan’s to George H.W. Bush in 1992, allowing him to focus solely on his foes across the aisle.

Trump has long bristled at the term “vacation” and is expected to hold a handful of official events and trips while in New Jersey. But aides say his attention will be focused on golf, cable news and Twitter.

When Robert Mueller’s Russia probe wound down, culminatin­g in the special counsel’s appearance before Congress in July, a sense of relief permeated the West Wing, which was finally free of the investigat­ion that has shadowed the administra­tion. But Trump’s punitive trade tariffs, his racially inflammato­ry language and now a renewed national call for action on gun control have created internal pressure on the president and his staff.

His reelection strategy represents an approach not seen by an president in the modern era. Trump’s language has come under increased scrutiny this week after a warning similar to his about a “Hispanic invasion” was found in the rambling screed linked to the gunman who killed 22 people in El Paso, Texas.

Trump’s response to the shootings — nine more people were killed in Dayton a few hours later — has been uneven.

But Trump’s problems extend beyond U.S. borders to Iran, the Persian Gulf, North Korea and about pulling forces out of Afghanista­n by the 2020 election, a move some aides fear would be premature and could lead to a dangerous vacuum in the region.

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