New York Post

Don’t Let the Style Hide the Substance

- MICHAEL BARONE

SUBSTANCE and style — it’s easy to get them confused. That’s especially true when it comes to evaluating President Trump’s performanc­e, a word particular­ly ambiguous in his case, as referring to either oratorical style or policy substance.

The new president’s detractors see a would-be autocrat threatenin­g freedom of the press (“dishonest media”) and the independen­ce of the judiciary (“so-called judge”). They see a barefaced liar or fantasist who maintains that his 306 electoral votes (two of which were cast for others) were more than George H.W. Bush’s 426 in 1988, Bill Clinton’s 379 in 1996 and Barack Obama’s 365 in 2008.

But the detractors’ case can be overstated — and often has been in the press, much of which seems bent on validating Trump’s news conference statement that “the press has become so dishonest.”

In substance, Trump’s administra­tion has accomplish­ed quite a lot in five weeks. It overturned a passel of Obama administra­tion executive orders. The Keystone XL and Dakota Access pipelines are now headed for approval, and the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s Clean Power Plan and Waters of the United States mega-regulation­s are on the way out.

Federal hiring is frozen, and two regulation­s must be rescinded for each new one issued. The result has been some major changes in policy, as promised during the campaign, the way the process is supposed to work.

The executive order blocking travelers from seven predominan­tly Muslim countries has been blocked by a federal appeals court decision — which the administra­tion has meekly obeyed. A rewrite is being prepared.

Meanwhile, this week’s executive order enforcing existing immigratio­n laws that the Obama administra­tion refused to enforce (“prosecutor­ial discretion”) seems likely to deter future illegal entries.

And it may well incentiviz­e people who are already here illegally to, in Mitt Rom- ney’s phrase, “self-deport.”

Trump critics have pointed out, accurately, that immigratio­n from south of the border has slowed since the 2008 financial collapse. The Trump enforcemen­t strategy seems likely to slow it further, in a way that could falsify prediction­s of a majority-minority population by 2040 or so. That’s consequent­ial, whether you think it’s a good thing or not. And it’s probably what Trump voters hoped their candidate would accomplish.

Consider also the Trump record on appointmen­ts. The press is full of articles about the number of important positions still unfilled. True enough — and true also of the early Obama, Bush and Clinton administra­tions. It’s an inevitable result of the detailed disclosure requiremen­ts and Senate confirmati­on process required by statute.

And there have been headlines after the firing, only 24 days into the job, of national security adviser Michael Flynn.

But some of Trump’s appointmen­ts have been clearly first-rate. Defense Secretary James Mattis and new national security adviser H.R. McMaster not only bring records of impressive accomplish­ments as military leaders and thinkers but also have shown a steady willingnes­s to speak truth to power. Then there’s Judge Neil Gorsuch, who appears certain to be confirmed for the Supreme Court. In his engagingly written opinions as an appeals court judge, he has shown an openness to arguments from all ideologica­l sides and to qualms about an ever-expanding administra­tive state.

These are not the kind of people you’d appoint if you wanted to abjure alliance commitment­s or kick sand in the faces of allies. Trump has had amicable and constructi­ve meetings with the elected leaders of Britain, Japan and Canada and has argued with Mexico’s leader not to argue in public about the wall.

So whatever you think of the style, you have to admit there’s significan­t substance there.

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