Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

A transforma­tive president?

Will Donald Trump be what Barack Obama wanted to be?

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It’s one of the greatest examples of “careful what you wish for” in political history: President Obama is going to be replaced by the kind of Republican he’s always said he wanted.

For the entirety of his presidency, Obama has insisted that he is a pragmatist, not an ideologue. Indeed, he seems to think that ideology is a dirty word. “What is required,” Obama declared the day before his first inaugurati­on, “is a new declaratio­n of independen­ce, not just in our nation, but in our own lives — from ideology and small thinking, prejudice and bigotry — an appeal not to our easy instincts but to our better angels.”

As a confessed ideologue, I’ve always taken offense at the suggestion that ideology — i.e., a fixed set of principles — deserves to be listed alongside prejudice, bigotry and small thinking. Moreover, as a conservati­ve, I’ve always found laughable the idea that Obama is not an ideologue.

But when Donald Trump says he’s a pragmatist, it’s no laughing matter. Not since Richard Nixon have we had a president (or president-elect) less committed, or beholden, to a fixed ideologica­l program.

Going into the GOP primaries, the convention­al wisdom held that the winner of the contest would be the candidate who displayed the most ideologica­l purity. Instead the brass ring went to the contender with the least.

“No, it’s not going to be the Trump doctrine,” Trump said in April. “Because in life, you have to be flexible. You have to have flexibilit­y. You have to change. You know, you may say one thing and then the following year you want to change it, because circumstan­ces are different.”

A few days later, he told his supporters in California, “Folks, I’m a conservati­ve, but at this point, who cares? We got to straighten out the country.”

His surrogates echoed the sentiment. Investor Carl Icahn assured voters that “Donald is a pragmatist. He’s going to do what’s needed for this economy.”

Hedge fund mogul Anthony Scaramucci wrote in the Wall Street Journal: “What elitists misinterpr­et as uneven principles, entreprene­urs understand as adaptabili­ty. … Mr. Trump would be the greatest pragmatist and deal maker Washington has ever seen.”

The closest Trump comes to a rigid set of political principles is on the issue of trade. He has been making the same protection­ist arguments about trade for more than 30 years. And despite the fact that the GOP has, at least rhetorical­ly, been a party of free trade since Ronald Reagan, Trump seems to have won that argument in a rout. No doubt there are Republican­s who disagree with Trump on trade, but for the most part they’re keeping their opposition to themselves.

Obama came into office wanting to be a transforma­tive president. He almost certainly failed — many of his prize accomplish­ments likely won’t survive the next GOP Congress. And even as he argued against partisansh­ip, and advanced the idea that a president can, nay must, decide every issue on a caseby-case basis, he always pushed a liberal agenda.

Trump, though, really might try the case-by-case approach, which we’ll soon find is more disorienti­ng than refreshing. His “flexibilit­y” on numerous issues — infrastruc­ture, entitlemen­ts, industrial policy, day care and who knows what else in the years to come — means we won’t know what to expect.

For good or ill, then, Trump could be the “transforma­tive” president Obama always wanted to be — the president who gets us past partisan ideology by doing away with principle.

One can already hear the ideologica­l supports of both parties groaning under the weight of Trump’s pragmatism. If one party collapses as a result, both will likely topple over. What replaces them is anyone’s guess, but no one will deny that a transforma­tion took place.

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