Los Angeles Times

An unpresiden­tial display

At his long-awaited news conference, Trump was — surprise! — defensive and thin-skinned.

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If anyone thought that election to the highest office in the land had changed Donald Trump, the president-elect’s news conference Wednesday was a depressing spectacle. As he did on the campaign trail, Trump berated the media, hurled exaggerate­d accusation­s and trafficked in vague promises — “incredible people” are going to do “tremendous things.” He shouted down a CNN reporter. He praised himself in the third person. (“No one’s ever had crowds like Trump has had.”) He acknowledg­ed for the first time that “I think it was Russia” that hacked Democratic email accounts even as he minimized the possibilit­y that Russia might be trying to undermine American interests. And then he seemed to back off his assertion that Russia had done the hacking.

The prevailing tone was one of defensiven­ess and self-justificat­ion. Asked if he was concerned that the American people might resent his refusal to release his income taxes, Trump replied: “No. I don’t think so. I won.”

The format of the event in the lobby of Trump Tower in New York resembled a campaign rally more than a news briefing. And its original purpose — an explanatio­n by Trump about how he would resolve conflicts of interest created by his vast business empire — was largely subcontrac­ted to a lawyer.

It’s understand­able that Trump was outraged over the publicatio­n by BuzzFeed News of a dossier containing allegation­s that Russia had been cultivatin­g Trump and had amassed compromisi­ng informatio­n about him. The assertions in the dossier were incendiary, unverified and occasional­ly salacious. But at the news conference, Trump also heaped contempt on a reporter for CNN, which had merely reported that a two-page synopsis of the allegation­s was presented to Trump and President Obama by intelligen­ce officials. “Your organizati­on’s terrible,” Trump told CNN reporter Jim Acosta. (BuzzFeed, by contrast, was deemed a “failing pile of garbage.”)

Trump also turned his wrath on the intelligen­ce community, defending a tweet in which he had written: “Intelligen­ce agencies should never have allowed this fake news to ‘leak’ into the public. One last shot at me. Are we living in Nazi Germany?” Yet it isn’t even clear that the intelligen­ce community was the source of the dossier, which reportedly has been widely circulated in Washington.

As for admitting error, Trump’s aides probably breathed a sigh of relief when he finally said that Russia indeed was responsibl­e for hacking Democratic emails — although it was a perfunctor­y admission reminiscen­t of his concession that Obama was born in the United States. And by the end of the news conference he was already backtracki­ng, saying: “But you know what? It could have been others also.”

We had hoped that as Inaugurati­on Day neared, Trump would recognize that as president he needed to speak and act with greater care. Wednesday’s undiscipli­ned news conference was not encouragin­g.

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