Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Score one for the imaginary Donald Trump

- CHRISTIAN SCHNEIDER

When former FBI Director James Comey’s prepared congressio­nal testimony hit the Internet on Wednesday, President Donald Trump’s supporters rejoiced. In the statement, Comey admitted that he told Trump on three separate occasions that Trump wasn’t personally under investigat­ion by the FBI in connection with potential Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

This is a point Trump had made upon firing Comey in May, and this week Trump enthusiast­s were happy to declare the president clear of any wrongdoing now that Comey had corroborat­ed it. Yet this is an example of how far we’ve sunk — the U.S president is now getting credit for having managed not to lie to the American people.

Let the canonizati­on process begin.

In fact, Comey’s written and verbal testimony on Thursday would provide so very much more. In it, Comey accuses the president of the United States of trying to pressure him into an inappropri­ate relationsh­ip, demanding “loyalty” of the FBI director and urging him to shut down an active investigat­ion.

To say that Comey’s testimony “vindicates” Trump in any way ignores giant swaths of what the former FBI director actually said — it’s like leaving the theater after seeing “Wonder Woman” and telling people it’s a World War I documentar­y.

Donald Trump’s new FBI director pick has Russian ties of his own

This is the place where Trump’s supporters exist: rather than seeing the president for who he clearly is, they construct an entirely different Trump in the negative space around him. If Comey accuses the president of obstructin­g an FBI investigat­ion, they will say, “but look at all the laws Comey didn’t charge Trump with breaking!” If Comey says Trump lied, they’ll say “according to Comey’s own admission, here’s an instance where Trump told the truth!”

Given that the Trump we know often behaves indefensib­ly, his supporters simply build a more tolerable version of Trump, the one they see in the blank spaces around him. They view Trump as freeform jazz: his strength is in the things he doesn’t say. Even if he actually says them.

Yet the first step in creating a new, more palatable Trump is never admitting he said things he actually said. Prior to the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, Trump expressed support for the operation; in presidenti­al debate after presidenti­al debate in 2016, he lied, claiming he never had supported the war. Trump knew that if he just kept saying it, his supporters would somehow wish it true. Score one for Imaginary Trump.

For #AlwaysTrum­pers, it is also important to concoct fictions about Trump and never back down from them. Trump supporters are required to pretend, for instance, that the president is a

tough-as-nails, no-nonsense negotiator who will only get us the best deals — yet the briefest of trips through his Twitter timeline reveals a thin-skinned moral adolescent obsessed with settling scores and being well-liked.

The most common trick in defending imaginary Trump, however, is the practice of “whatabouti­sm” — or complainin­g about the outrage over Trump’s actions when there was a lack of concern over a previous president’s similar actions.

Comey says Trump tried to pressure him to end the investigat­ion? What about the time Bill Clinton met with Attorney General Loretta Lynch on an airport tarmac while Lynch was supposedly investigat­ing Hillary Clinton?

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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump: He is whatever his supporters believe him to be.
GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump: He is whatever his supporters believe him to be.

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