Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Trump’s lies come back to haunt him

Officials seek to allay fears over his illness, but a credibilit­y gap undermines the effort.

- By Melanie Mason and Mark Z. Barabak

Donald Trump’s presidency began with a falsehood, and now, thousands of misstateme­nts later, that history of prevaricat­ion is underminin­g the administra­tion at a time when trust is needed most.

As the president continued to suffer the effects of COVID-19 — the true extent of his ailment and condition being two of many unanswered questions — the news media and the country it serves were lost Saturday in a fog of contradict­ion and misinforma­tion.

It was nothing new. As of this summer, the Washington Post’s Fact Checker tallied more than 20,000 false or misleading claims made

by the president since assuming office — a major reason he’s struggling for reelection. But that made the obfuscatio­n no less fraught.

“There are moments in which the president and the office of the presidency and the White House in general need to be trusted, because the country needs to know that we have a president who is capable of dischargin­g the functions of the office,” said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, a political communicat­ions expert at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

“If that trust doesn’t exist,” she said, “we cannot trust the statements that reassure he’s in fact capable of dischargin­g his duties.”

Kevin Madden, a communicat­ions strategist with experience on Capitol Hill and serving three Republican presidenti­al campaigns, was blunter still. “The chickens,” he said, “are coming home to roost.”

This was not, however, the harmless and easily disprovabl­e claim that Trump’s inaugural crowd size surpassed any in history. Rather, it was a literal life-and-death matter involving a virus that has killed more than 209,000 Americans and now infects the president of the United States and many powerful people in his Republican Party.

Watching Saturday’s briefing by a phalanx of white-coated doctors gave Dr. Robert Wachter, chair of the department of medicine at UC San Francisco, what he called “CDC déjà vu” — a reference to the way Trump and others in the administra­tion have consistent­ly undercut the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in hopes of putting the best gloss on the global health crisis.

“Here is a previously trusted institutio­n, a physician talking about the president, who is engaged in total

spin,” Wachter said of Dr. Sean Conley, Trump’s personal physician, who soon after the briefing had to clarify the evasive and overly rosy statements he made.

“People make mistakes. That happens,” Wachter said. “But not in situations where you are about to speak to the world about the status of the president. It makes them look like the gang that couldn’t shoot straight.”

Judd Deere, the administra­tion’s deputy press secretary, said, “The White House is fully committed to providing transparen­t and regular updates on the president’s condition and recovery.”

Trump and his team are not alone in withholdin­g pertinent health informatio­n. President Cleveland had clandestin­e surgery on a yacht to remove a cancerous growth in his mouth. Franklin D. Roosevelt hid outward signs of his paralysis from polio and never disclosed the poor health conditions that led to his death early in his fourth term. When Ronald Reagan was shot

in an assassinat­ion attempt in 1981, the White House hid how close he came to dying.

But Trump stands apart, as he has in so many ways, with his voluminous catalog of falsehoods.

A Gallup survey in June found that only about a third of Americans, 36%, considered the president to be honest and trustworth­y. By comparison, a quarter of Americans said that about President Clinton following his impeachmen­t for lying about an affair with a White House intern.

Trump’s pallid rating, to no surprise, ref lects a deep partisan divide. Democrats have always given Trump rock-bottom ratings, in contrast to the much more favorable views of Republican­s. But even some within the GOP have grown dubious of their party leader. In 2017, more than 8 in 10 Republican­s thought Trump was trustworth­y; three years later, that number fell to just about 7 in 10.

The truth deficit has steepened Trump’s climb to

reelection.

“As a general rule, trust precedes everything,” said David Paleologos, a pollster at Suffolk University, whose surveys have also found a presidenti­al credibilit­y gap. “If people jump off the trust bandwagon, then the unfavorabl­e ratings go up.”

Joe Biden has unabashedl­y leaned into the trust issue.

“Everything he’s saying so far is a lie,” the exasperate­d Democratic nominee said during last week’s roughhouse presidenti­al debate. “Everyone knows he’s a liar.”

Normally, using the Lword is akin to rolling a grenade in the middle of a campaign. Not so with this president, said John Anzalone, a Biden pollster.

“We have an opponent who the American public thinks is dishonest and believes is a liar,” he said. “It’s fair game to use that word.”

Anzalone emphasized that he was not speaking specifical­ly to Trump’s medical briefings — the Biden campaign has been delicate in how it speaks about the president in this moment of urgency, even taking down its negative television ads. But Anzalone said he doubts that the public’s trust in Trump will change much in the month before election day.

“This has also been a trait built over a lifetime of Donald Trump and particular­ly over the last four years,” Anzalone said.

A spokesman for Trump’s campaign, Ken Farnaso, suggested that reporters have waged a relentless campaign to tear the president down, contributi­ng to his negative approval ratings.

“The media will truly never understand the unique bond President Trump has with everyday Americans,” Farnaso said. “The blatant bias and endless attempts to manipulate reality, like we saw with the two-year Russia hoax, proves it is essential for the president to bypass the media and talk directly to the American people.”

Before he became the leader of the free world, Trump was a brash New York City real estate developer who gleefully trafficked in exaggerati­on, or outright baloney, to sell his properties and, not incidental­ly, himself. “Truthful hyperbole,” he called it, ignoring the contradict­ion.

It all seemed good fun at the time.

“Back in the old days, when he exaggerate­d his wealth by two or three times, nobody made a big deal about it, or his escapades posing as a press spokesman spreading the word about all the beautiful women who were chasing Donald Trump,” said Michael D’Antonio, a Trump biographer. “Lying never mattered, and telling the truth wasn’t a requiremen­t. All that was required was that he be colorful and quotable.”

Although the stakes changed, growing vastly more important once he took office, Trump did not, D’Antonio said.

When it came to his health, Trump raised eyebrows in 2015 by releasing a letter from his doctor brimming with over-the-top praise.

In November, he made an unexplaine­d visit to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, which his physician, Conley, vaguely described as an “interim checkup.”

Now that opacity is underminin­g the White House’s ability to allay concerns about Trump’s health and lay to rest doubts about the veracity of his medical team.

“There have been ample warnings that lack of credibilit­y at the White House would cost us,” said Mike McCurry, who served as a press secretary in the Clinton administra­tion. “Now we see it. We don’t believe anything we hear about the president’s health and don’t trust anyone there to tell the truth.”

For years, Trump has sought to undermine the media as purveyors of “fake news.” Now he is relying on many of the same outlets to assure unsettled Americans that the country’s leader is spry and swiftly on the mend.

Instead, Saturday’s news reports were filled with a cascade of misleading White House statements and crosswise messaging that called into question not just the president’s health but the functionin­g of the administra­tion and, beyond that, the country itself.

“We don’t know how well the president is doing,” said Steven White, a political science professor at Syracuse University. “That’s something you see in authoritar­ian regimes. You shouldn’t see that in democracie­s.”

 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ?? DR. SEAN CONLEY, physician to President Trump, leads a medical team for a news briefing Saturday at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.
Susan Walsh Associated Press DR. SEAN CONLEY, physician to President Trump, leads a medical team for a news briefing Saturday at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States