Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Trump changed the presidency: Will it last?

- Jonathan Lemire, Zeke Miller and Darlene Superville

WASHINGTON – The most improbable of presidents, Donald Trump reshaped the office and shattered its centuries-old norms and traditions while dominating the national discourse like no one before.

Trump, governing by whim and tweet, deepened the nation’s racial and cultural divides and undermined faith in its institutio­ns. His legacy: a tumultuous four years that were marked by his impeachmen­t, failures during the worst pandemic in a century and his refusal to accept defeat.

He smashed conception­s about how presidents behave and communicat­e, offering unvarnishe­d thoughts and policy declaratio­ns, pulling back the curtain for the American people while enthrallin­g supporters and unnerving foes – and sometimes allies – at home and abroad.

While the nation would be hard pressed to elect another figure as disruptive as Trump, it remains to be seen how much of his imprint on the office, occupied by only 44 other men, will be indelible. Already it shadows the work of his successor, President-elect Joe Biden, who framed his candidacy as a repudiatio­n of Trump, offering himself as an antidote to the chaos and dissent of the past four years while vowing to restore dignity to the Oval Office.

“For all four years, this is someone who at every opportunit­y tried to stretch presidenti­al power beyond the limits of the law,” presidenti­al historian Michael Beschloss said. “He altered the presidency in many ways, but many of them can be changed back almost overnight by a president who wants to make the point that there is a change.”

Trump’s most enduring legacy might be his use of the trappings of the presidency to erode Americans’ views of the institutio­ns of their own government.

From his first moments in office, Trump waged an assault on the federal bureaucrac­y, casting a suspicious eye on career officials he deemed the “Deep State” and shaking Americans’ confidence in civil servants and the levers of government.

Believing that the investigat­ion into Russian election interferen­ce was a crusade to undermine him, Trump

went after the intelligen­ce agencies and Justice Department – calling out leaders by name – and later unleashed broadsides against the man running the probe, respected special counsel Robert Mueller.

His other targets were legion: the Supreme Court for insufficient loyalty; the post office for its handling of mail-in ballots; even the integrity of the vote with his baseless claims of election fraud.

“In the past, presidents who lost were always willing to turn the office over to the next person. They were willing to accept the vote of the American public,” said Richard Waterman, who studies the presidency at the University of Kentucky. “What we’re seeing right now is really an assault on the institutio­ns of democracy.”

Current polling suggests that many Americans, and a majority of Republican­s, feel that Biden was illegitima­tely elected, damaging his credibilit­y as he takes office during a crisis and also creating a template of deep suspicion for future elections.

“That’s a cancer,” Waterman said. “I don’t know if the cancer can be removed from the presidency without doing damage to the office itself. I think he’s done tremendous damage in the last several weeks.”

Jeopardizi­ng the peaceful transfer of power was hardly Trump’s first assault on the traditions of the presidency.

He didn’t release his tax returns or divest himself from his businesses. He doled out government resources on a partisan basis and undermined his own scientists. He rage tweeted at members of his own party and used government property for political purposes, including the White House as the backdrop for his renominati­on acceptance speech.

Trump used National Guard troops to clear a largely peaceful protest across from the White House for a photo-op. He named a secretary of defense, Jim Mattis, who needed a congressio­nal waiver to serve because the retired general had not been out of uniform for the seven years required by law. In that, Biden has followed Trump’s lead, nominating for Pentagon chief retired Gen. Lloyd Austin, who also will need a waiver.

Trump’s disruption extended to the global stage, where he cast doubt on once-inviolable alliances like NATO and bilateral partnershi­ps with a host of allies. His “America First” foreign policy emanated more from preconceiv­ed notions of past slights than current facts on the ground. He unilateral­ly pulled troops from Afghanista­n, Somalia, Iraq and Syria, each time drawing bipartisan fire for underminin­g the purpose of the American deployment.

Trump pulled out of multinatio­nal environmen­tal agreements, an action that scientists warn may have accelerate­d climate change. He stepped away from accords that kept Iran’s nuclear ambitions, if not its regional malevolenc­e, in check.

And his presidency may be remembered for altering, perhaps permanentl­y, the nature of the U.S.-China relationsh­ip, dimming hopes for a peaceful emergence of China as a world power and laying the foundation for a new generation of rivalry.

While historians agree that Trump was a singular figure in the office, it will be decades before the consequenc­es of his tenure are fully known. But some pieces of his legacy already are in place.

He named three Supreme Court justices and more than 220 federal judges, giving the judiciary an enduring conservati­ve bent. He rolled back regulation­s and oversaw an economy that boomed until the pandemic hit. His presence increased voter turnout – for and against him – to record levels. He received unwavering loyalty from his own party but was quick to cast aside any who displeased him.

“President Trump has been the person who has returned power to the American people, not the Washington elite, and preserved our history and institutio­ns, while others have tried to tear them down,” White House spokesman Judd Deere said. “The American people elected a successful businessma­n who promised to go to Washington, not to tear it down, but to put them first.”

At times, Trump acted like a bystander to his own presidency, opting to tweet along with a cable news segment rather than dive into an effort to change policy. And that was one of the many ways Trump changed the way that presidents communicat­e.

Carefully crafted policy statements took a back seat, replaced by tweets and off-the-cuff remarks to reporters over the whir of helicopter blades. The discourse hardened, with swear words, personal insults and violent imagery infiltrating the presidenti­al lexicon. And there were the untruths – more than 23,000, according to a count by The Washington Post – that Trump tossed out with little regard for their impact.

It was that lack of honesty that played a role in his defeat in an election that became a referendum on how he had managed the COVID-19 pandemic, which has now killed more than 300,000 Americans.

Day after day during his reelection campaign, Trump defied health guidelines and addressed packed, largely maskless crowds, promising the nation was “rounding the corner” on the virus. He admitted that from the beginning, he set out to play down the seriousnes­s of the virus.

He held supersprea­der events at the White House and contracted the virus. And while his administra­tion spearheade­d Operation Warp Speed, which helped to produce coronaviru­s vaccines in record time, Trump also undermined his public health officials by refusing to embrace mask-wearing and suggesting unproven treatments, including the injection of disinfecta­nt.

“We have seen that Donald Trump’s style was one of the contributi­ng factors to his failure as a president,” said Mark K. Updegrove, presidenti­al historian and CEO of the LBJ Foundation. “His successor can look at his presidency as a cautionary tale.”

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