Las Vegas Review-Journal

Border wall and burgers: What is Trump thinking?

- Gail Collins

Our subject today is Donald Trump’s mind. Not the speculatio­n about Fury” period.whether he’s losing his marbles. That was during our “Fire and Now we’re thinking about that lovely bipartisan meeting the president hosted Tuesday with members of Congress about immigratio­n. Everybody was impressed by how concerned Trump seemed to be about all the young “Dreamers” suddenly facing possible deportatio­n.

“I came out feeling the president had made it very clear he wants this resolved ASAP,” said Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the House Democratic whip.

The only problem is that Trump seems to be committed to two totally contradict­ory ideas on whattodo.

Is he being your typical pol? Your typical loony person? Something in between?

Let’s revisit.

Right now, the real immigratio­n crisis is about the 800,000 young people who were brought here illegally as children and given protection under the Obama administra­tion.

Trump hates calling them “Dreamers,” so he refers to them as “the DACA population,” after the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program that protected them. Until he terminated it.

They could be in danger of deportatio­n beginning in March. The Tuesday Trump was very disturbed about this situation. Really, you’d hardly have known that he was the one who created it. He called for “a bill of love” to make things right.

The fix is actually pretty easy. There’s a bipartisan bill floating around the House right now that would protect the Dreamers from deportatio­n and add more money for technology to guard the border. Then later on, if it’s feeling ambitious, Congress could tackle a big immigratio­n reform. That would include a path to citizenshi­p for many of the illegal immigrants here now and some sops to conservati­ves, like restrictio­ns on their ability to bring in relatives.

And yeah, maybe some wall equivalent. We don’t need to discuss that now. The “Dreamers” are an immediate crisis. But even if you thought building a monstrous multibilli­on-dollar barrier along the border was a good idea, it’s not something that’s going to happen anytime soon.

Here is the current vision in the president’s mind:

“We don’t need a wall where you have rivers and mountains and everything else protecting it,” he told that congressio­nal meeting. “But we do need a wall for a fairly good portion. We also — as you know, it was passed in 2006 — an essentiall­y similar thing which — a fence, a very substantia­l fence was passed. But unfortunat­ely, I don’t know, they never got it done. But they need it.”

So, OK.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-calif., proposed doing “a clean DACA bill now” followed by a major immigratio­n reform later. Trump thought that was a great idea. “We’re going to do DACA,” he announced, “and then we can start immediatel­y on the phase two, which would be comprehens­ive.”

So easy, so bipartisan, so ... bill of love.

“We’re on the same page,” Trump told the gathering.

“We are, we are,” said Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-texas, who had been arguing strenuousl­y against the wall idea.

Then Wednesday the president shouted “No! No! No!” when asked if he’d be open to any deal on the immediatel­y endangered “Dreamers” that didn’t also involve his Mexican wall.

This was at an appearance with the poor prime minister of Norway, who had to look sympatheti­c when Trump managed to find ways — in a rather short news conference — to brag about the U.S. trade surplus with her country, say “no collusion” seven times, brag about winning the Electoral College and attack Hillary Clinton. (“But Hillary was not for a strong military, and Hillary, my opponent, was for windmills . ... ”) Plus torpedo the DACA plan.

So Trump, who told those Congress members he would “take the heat” for anything they wanted to do to save the “Dreamers,” threw up a wall. How do we explain all this?

A) Situationa­l ethics.

B) Extreme dementia.

C) Just another day.

Here’s an answer. We are well aware by now that there are several incarnatio­ns of the president, from the Somewhat Normal Republican Trump (SNORT) to the Nearly Unhinged Trump (NUT).

The one we saw at the bipartisan meeting was the Reasonable Chatty Trump, whose pleasant dispositio­n makes up for the fact that the initials don’t spell anything.

The Reasonable version can sit through a fairly long gathering nodding, agreeing, making the occasional joke and appearing to be an excellent listener. When he’s actually not paying any attention at all.

What do you think was actually on Trump’s mind when Feinstein asked that question?

A) Picturing Steve Bannon curled up in the fetal position, crying under his bed.

B) Imagining the TV networks swooning over his warmhearte­d concern for those ... DACA persons.

C) Just cheeseburg­ers.

Your guess is as good as mine.

But the great part of this tactic is that everybody walks away feeling they’ve made a real impression. Until it becomes clear that nothing ever sinks in.

Gail Collins is a columnist for The New York Times.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI / AP ?? President Donald Trump gestures during a meeting with lawmakers on immigratio­n policy Tuesday in the Cabinet Room of the White House.
EVAN VUCCI / AP President Donald Trump gestures during a meeting with lawmakers on immigratio­n policy Tuesday in the Cabinet Room of the White House.

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