Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

In search of the truth of Trumpism

- E. J. DIONNE JR. E.J. Dionne is a columnist for The Washington Post. Email ejdionne@washpost.com . Twitter: @EJDionne

Is Trumpism a scam? And if so, who is Donald Trump scamming?

Or is the country confrontin­g something even more troubling: a president unhinged from any realities that get in the way of his impulses, unmoored from any driving philosophy and willing to make everything up as he goes along, including “alternativ­e facts”?

Of course, there’s another possibilit­y: that there’s a method in all of this.

In his first days, Trump has been riding policy horses that seem to be moving in quite different directions.

On the one hand, he has continued to make himself out as a “populist” standing up for workers by scrapping the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p and bringing verbal pressure on American companies to keep or create jobs in the United States.

On the other, he has been promising corporatio­ns the moon. He has already delivered a freeze on regulation­s, imposed a gag order on many federal agencies that businesses see as getting in their way (notably the Environmen­tal Protection Agency) and promised steep tax cuts.

Yet he also said he would impose a “very major” border tax to discourage companies from moving jobs outside the United States.

In principle, it’s possible that Trump is returning to the days of William McKinley and Calvin Coolidge. From the 1890s to the Great Depression, Republican presidents pursued policies that were simultaneo­usly pro-business and protection­ist.

The world of finance seems to be wagering that Trump’s procorpora­te side will dominate. On Wednesday, the Dow Jones industrial average broke above 20,000 for the first time in its history.

Still, all of this assumes coherence and discipline, two words not readily associated with Trump. He has now put his presidency behind a lie, that 3 million to 5 million illegally cast ballots cost him the popular vote. He went further on Wednesday, despite widespread criticism, even from within his own party. In a morning tweet, he said he’d ask for “a major investigat­ion into VOTER FRAUD,” using those Trumpian capital letters.

Here again, Trump set off a debate between madness and method. The most obvious conclusion is that we are confrontin­g yet another case of his bizarre insecurity. He’s furious that even though he is president, his enemies are denying him a popular mandate because he lost to Hillary Clinton by 2.9 million votes. But voting rights advocates fear that he is laying the groundwork for extensive voter-suppressio­n efforts aimed at making voting far more difficult for Latinos, AfricanAme­ricans and others hostile to him.

Similarly, some of his new executive orders on immigratio­n, including one pledging to build the border wall that’s become his trademark, could be read as more show than substance. But his moves against “sanctuary cities,” along with his at times harsh rhetoric on Wednesday at the Department of Homeland Security, had more ominous implicatio­ns.

If there is any consistenc­y here, it lies in the right-wing nationalis­m of his senior adviser Steve Bannon. He hopes to marry broadly conservati­ve economic policies with protection­ism, restrictio­ns on immigratio­n and new infrastruc­ture and military spending.

It’s not exactly reassuring that this is the best spin that can be put on Trump’s opening days. And the president’s apparent belief that he can make up realities of his own choosing parallels the practice of authoritar­ian leaders, past and present. It’s no accident that George Orwell’s “1984” hit the top of Amazon’s best-seller list on Wednesday.

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