Los Angeles Times

TRUMP AND CHAOS ARRIVE IN D.C.

- cathleen.decker@latimes.com By Cathleen Decker

Change came to Washington in 2017, as the new president promised. So did chaos, division and disruption, and a sense that the guardrails that usually had kept the capital and American politics on a normal path had collapsed under the weight of it all.

A year that started with a bleak inaugural address in which President Trump spoke of “American carnage” and his angry insistence that he’d drawn the greatest crowd of supporters ever to watch a swearing-in ended with the president venting publicly at the FBI, his own Justice Department and, in what became a common refrain, his predecesso­r, President Obama, and his defeated opponent, Hillary Clinton.

All year, the capital and, by extension, politics at large have been roiled by multiple investigat­ions into Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election, questions of whether the Trump campaign was also involved, massive protests, a president whose moods could be transparen­tly ascertaine­d in 140-character bites, rancor on Capitol Hill and discontent in Trump’s own administra­tion.

On Capitol Hill, Democrats and Republican­s have been thoroughly alienated from each other, as Republican­s forge ahead alone on goals long thwarted by Obama, only to find themselves cobbled by internal warfare, while Democrats watch and contemplat­e their own brewing civil war.

By the end of the year, for many there was a palpable fear of what was to come on matters as diverse as the Cold War-reminiscen­t dispute with North Korea and the specter of sexual harassment allegation­s tarring politician­s of both major parties.

Trump’s presidency has echoed the curvature of his campaign, with a histrionic public facade that fronts an administra­tion that does manage to get some things done.

Trump has begun to reshape the federal judiciary in conservati­ve fashion, impacts that will be felt for decades given judges’ lifetime appointmen­ts. He has curbed regulation­s on a variety of fronts, many of them aiding industries that have long complained about restrictio­ns, and has benefited from an economy that, continuing the long trend begun under Obama, has soared.

He has begun walking back trade deals reached by his predecesso­rs, including the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p. He has altered long-standing, bipartisan foreign policy goals, including his December announceme­nt that he would move the U.S. Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem and his soft touch toward Russia.

But apart from the Pacific trade deal, those were nowhere near the top of the bullet points he fired off night after night in campaign rallies filled with adoring fans.

The wall meant to block illegal immigratio­n? Nowhere near funded. Obamacare repealed? Nope. China labeled a money manipulato­r and punished? Not at all. The swamp of Washington drained? It’s deeper and more brackish. Wall Street punished for plundering middle America? To the contrary, it was rewarded with Cabinet positions and a promising tax plan.

As 2017 closes, America is no closer than it was at the year’s beginning to be able to answer some basic questions about the president’s approach, so often scattersho­t, and his odds of forging a presidency whose accomplish­ments might still some of the national discontent.

From the start of his campaign until now, Trump has succeeded thanks to an overt usage of usversus-them, fueling the anger of his loyal base of roughly 35% of Americans against those he’s attacked: Muslims, Latinos, women who have accused him of sexual misconduct, Gold Star families, African American athletes, Republican­s who don’t genuflect to him, Democrats of all stripes, and always, always, Clinton and Obama.

But like chaos, anger blows past boundaries. Already, Trump’s presidency has set off a fierce backlash that has improved Democratic chances in the 2018 elections. The question — of enormous import for 2018 and Trump’s reelection odds in 2020 — is whether he can contain something he helped unleash.

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