Imperial Valley Press

Remember when Matt Lauer was Trump’s chump?

- DICK POLMAN

Matt Lauer will be remembered as a fallen sexual harasser, but in my mind, he’s forever immortaliz­ed as a Donald Trump toady.

Return with me to the 2016 campaign, to the so-called “Commander-in-Chief Forum,” when NBC inexplicab­ly entrusted a session with Trump to a guy whose brain had apparently been fried by too many decades of morning happy talk. The alpha male of the NBC office met his match and knuckled under — thus normalizin­g the unfit candidate’s lies and ignorance. It was a disgracefu­l performanc­e that will live in infamy.

Trump was preceded on stage by Hillary Clinton, and given what we now know about the private Lauer — his aggressive behavior toward women, his crass use of gender power, his obsession with women’s looks and bodies — it was clearly in character that he repeatedly badgered and interrupte­d her over a span of 30 minutes. Indeed, the first 10 minutes was a sustained interrogat­ion about her emails, and by the time she got a chance to tackle the various foreign policy issues on which she knew far more than Trump could ever process (China, nuclear deterrence, climate change, terrorism, take your pick), she had to rush her answers — with Lauer interrupti­ng, urging her to finish.

She left, replaced by the dominant male. And presto, Lauer underwent a metamorpho­sis. Suddenly he was servile. Suddenly he was not interrupti­ng. He was supine as Trump walked all over him.

Lauer: “Will you be prepared on day one?”

Trump: “One hundred percent.” Lauer, with a hardball follow-up: “But you are prepared?”

Trump: “And I have to tell you, totally prepared.”

Well, that settled that! What more could a swing voter possibly want to know? A lot of things, actually. But over a span of 30 minutes, Lauer whiffed every time.

At one point, Trump said he was qualified to command the military and control the nuclear football because “I’ve built a great company … I’ve had great experience dealing on internatio­nal basis … I have great judgment.” Lauer let it go. He didn’t think to ask: What experience? How does building hotels qualify you to make decisions on war and peace?

At another point, Trump told Lauer, “I was totally against the war in Iraq,” a lie long exposed (he’d said on tape years earlier that he was OK with Bush’s invasion), but Lauer let it go. Trump also said that in Iraq, we should’ve “taken the oil,” but Lauer didn’t think to ask Trump how a purported Iraq dove could support pillaging Iraq’s natural resources.

At another point, Trump recycled one of his favorite 2016 lies, that President Obama was responsibl­e for ISIS, but Lauer didn’t think (or know) to point out that ISIS was formed in 2004 when Obama was a state senator in Illinois.

At another point, Trump addressed the issue of sexual assaults in the military and said “the best thing we can do it set up a court system within the military.” Lauer didn’t think to point out that we already have a court system within the military — and that it hasn’t worked. Assault allegation­s go up the chain of command, and the male officers protect their own. Which is why reformers have argued for years that these allegation­s be removed from the chain of command. If Lauer knew this, he chose not to follow up.

This question was more in Lauer’s comfort zone: “What kind of homework are you doing? What kind of things are you doing as you prepare” to be a president?

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States