Los Angeles Times

Shifting focus, policy chaos

Confusion reigns in White House as Trump hops from issue to issue

- By Christi Parsons christi.parsons@latimes.com Twitter: @cparsons Times staff writer Cathleen Decker in Washington contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — President Trump’s daily public schedule had been emailed later than usual the evening before, near 11 p.m., yet by Thursday morning it had already been upended. The update arrived before breakfast, straight from the president’s Twitter account to his millions of followers.

“Looking forward to 3:30 P.M. meeting today at the White House,” Trump wrote — to impose the tariffs on steel and aluminum imports that most Republican­s, his top advisors, many foreign allies and numerous American companies had implored him to reconsider. Aides scrambled to add the event — forced not for the first time, or even the first time this month, to react to the policy chaos the president increasing­ly seems to revel in.

Later, in rambling remarks to reporters before a morning Cabinet meeting, the president touched on no fewer than 15 different issues that he said he was working on. “A lot of great things are being done,” Trump said. “A lot of things are happening right now, as we speak.”

Many things are not getting done, however, and largely because of the president’s penchant for changing his mind, thinking aloud and then moving on to something else.

Every White House juggles a multitude of issues and problems. What sets Trump’s White House apart is how much seems to happen on the fly, driven by a president who calls the shots with proud disregard for policy ramificati­ons and process.

The result is confusion. “Each day is a new episode in the reality TV show,” said historian Allan Lichtman, a professor at American University. “It’s frightenin­g how quickly he turns to the next thing.”

Trump’s tumultuous first year as president was salvaged when the Republican-controlled Congress sent him a massive tax cuts bill to sign in December. That had Republican allies hoping for a more discipline­d, productive alliance for the year ahead. It hasn’t been so. The tariffs debate of March began with the president’s unexpected announceme­nt last week of imminent levies on steel and aluminum — a statement that took even most advisors by surprise, and provoked Trump’s chief economic advisor, Gary Cohn, to announce his resignatio­n this week.

Set aside was the previous debate over the president’s vacillatio­ns on policies addressing gun violence and school safety, the topic that consumed much of February after the massacre of 14 students and three educators at a Parkland, Fla., high school.

And that debate followed the still-unresolved fight that began the year — over Trump’s push to replace the Obama-era program protecting from deportatio­n hundreds of thousands of young immigrants, the socalled Dreamers, who were brought to the country illegally as children.

All but forgotten has been a fourth issue that Trump had called a top priority for 2018: an infrastruc­ture plan to spur the economy by fixing the nation’s crumbling roads, bridges, waterways, airports, sewers, levees and more. He has said little about it, and unenthusia­stic Republican leaders in Congress suggest they will not act on the matter this year.

Aside from the tariffs, which Trump had authority to impose without Congress, each of those issues he called priorities now languishes. Lawmakers express confusion over just what he wants to do, and he turns his attention elsewhere. Although the president said at the Cabinet meeting that bills to strengthen background checks for some gun purchasers “are moving along in Congress,” the House and Senate have made little progress.

On Thursday, Trump returned briefly to the subject of how to respond to mass shootings like the killings in Parkland, hosting a closeddoor roundtable on violent video games and whether those are a factor in motivating mass shooters. Critics complained that by turning his attention to video games, Trump was distractin­g from proposals to limit guns like the AR-15 assault rifle used in the Florida massacre and many previous shootings.

A day earlier, the president was back on the subject of immigratio­n and Dreamers briefly, in a speech to a conservati­ve Latino business group, but only to blame Democrats for the legislativ­e impasse.

Long before his political career, Trump disclosed his love of chaos in his 1987 book, “The Art of the Deal.”

“I keep a lot of balls in the air,” he wrote, “because most deals fall out.”

His friends defend the president, and point to the legal troubles that vex him. Eric Bolling, a friend who talks to Trump regularly, said it was hard to move forward when dealing with the “constant overhang” of a special counsel’s investigat­ion into the Trump campaign’s possible coordinati­on with Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

“Lawyers chew up so much of your valuable time, especially when they’re talking to every person,” Bolling said. “I’m surprised he has gotten this much accomplish­ed.”

Lately, Trump has also been dogged by allegation­s from an adult-film star, Stormy Daniels, who says she had an affair with Trump. She was paid $130,000 by Trump’s lawyer to remain silent before the 2016 election. She reportedly is preparing to speak publicly about the matter soon.

Also limiting Trump’s ability to make and push policies that advance his agenda, or respond to unexpected crises, is the unusually high turnover in his White House and the administra­tion more broadly, and the vacancies that remain in many essential offices, including ambassador­ships.

Trump often has refused to appoint people who spoke out against him during the campaign, leaving a large pool of experience­d Republican­s and policy experts on the sidelines. Now, more than a year into his presidency, the perceived dysfunctio­n and Trump’s record of publicly humiliatin­g top advisors has made some potential recruits unwilling to join his administra­tion.

Trump nonetheles­s lauded his practice of pitting advisors against one another, at an appearance this week alongside Sweden’s prime minister.

“I like conflict. I like having two people with different points of view, and I certainly have that,” he said. “And then I make a decision. But I like watching it, I like seeing it, and I think it’s the best way to go.”

Even some critics say Trump could be knocking items off his to-do list if he would focus and show discipline. The tariff plan is a prime example, said Senate Democratic leader Charles E. Schumer of New York.

“The president’s proposal does more harm to Europe and other allies like Canada than it does to China,” he said. “That’s what’s wrong with it. It’s so typical of this White House. Even when they have a good idea, they mess it up because they don’t think it through.

“The haphazard way these tariffs were put together has caused policy to miss the mark,” Schumer added.

Lichtman, the history professor, suggested that the apparent haphazardn­ess is actually part of Trump’s plan.

“The one thing Trump is good at is distractio­n and deflection,” he said. “He’ll talk about difficult things, but then he’ll move on to something else and the conversati­on will turn to that.

“Whatever happened to his pledge that ‘I’m going to challenge the NRA’?” Lichtman said, referring to Trump’s recent comments about the National Rifle Assn.

“He moved on,” blaming school shootings on mental health issues and violent video games, he said. “That’s why absolutely nothing is going to come from this school shooting.”

Bolling disagreed. A former Fox News host, he became friends with Trump after Bolling’s adult son died of an opioid overdose last year. The president called him to offer condolence­s, and continues to call on a regular basis to check in and talk things over.

“He’s been amazingly empathetic and compassion­ate,” Bolling said. “I know he cares about the issue. And I know he will try his best to get something done.”

 ?? Michael Reynolds EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP can impose tariffs without Congress, but other issues he has called priorities — immigratio­n, gun violence, infrastruc­ture — languish as lawmakers and aides try to figure out what to work on next.
Michael Reynolds EPA/Shuttersto­ck PRESIDENT TRUMP can impose tariffs without Congress, but other issues he has called priorities — immigratio­n, gun violence, infrastruc­ture — languish as lawmakers and aides try to figure out what to work on next.

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