Starkville Daily News

3 memorable American presidents and the truth

- MARK SHIELDS SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

There have been three memorable American presidents, the story goes. President George Washington could never tell a lie. President Richard Nixon could never tell the truth. And President Donald Trump cannot tell the difference.

At a White House news conference, Trump referred to his November

2016 victory, in which he received 304 electoral votes, as “the biggest Electoral College win since Ronald Reagan,” who was re-elected in 1984. Wrong. After Reagan and before Trump, Presidents George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama each won many more electoral votes than did Trump. When NBC’s Peter Alexander pointed out Trump’s misstateme­nt to him, the president responded: “I don’t know. I was given that informatio­n. Actually, I’ve seen that informatio­n around.”

The changing explanatio­ns for President Trump’s firing of FBI Director James Comey — in a way calculated to publicly and personally humiliate the director through his learning about his terminatio­n over cable TV news while he was in Los Angeles thanking FBI employees — remind us again of the president’s only intermitte­nt flirtation­s with candor.

The earnest and nonthreate­ning vice president, Mike Pence, assured the nation: “Let me be very clear that the president’s decision to accept the recommenda­tion of the deputy attorney general (Rod Rosenstein, in case you forgot) and the attorney general to remove Director Comey ... was based solely and exclusivel­y on his commitment to the best interest of the American people and to ensuring that the FBI has the trust and confidence of the people of this nation.” In less measured prose, this had also been the rationale for the president’s sacking of Comey offered by a succession of White House spokespeop­le.

Pence might want to first check the most recent Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll, which asked voters their positive or negative feelings toward a number of well-known individual­s and institutio­ns. Pence’s favorite House speaker, Paul Ryan, was low man. Ryan’s negative score was 18 percentage points higher than his positive score. The Republican Party’s negative score was 16 points higher. And Trump himself had a negative score that was 11 points higher than his positive score. Justice Neil Gorsuch, the National Rifle Associatio­n, Obama and Planned Parenthood all received net positive scores. But at the top of the list, with a net positive-over-

negative rating of 29 percentage points, was the “beleaguere­d” Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion.

The official White HouseVP explanatio­ns were exposed as untrue. Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein complained to White House counsel Don McGahn, insisting that the White HousePence statements were misleading and wrong. Rosenstein claimed that Trump had on Monday asked him for his Tuesday letter on Comey’s performanc­e and that Rosenstein had never explicitly called for Comey’s dismissal. But Rosenstein, a career federal

prosecutor who was previously respected by both Democrats and Republican­s, had been used to mislead the press and the public on why Comey was fired. Question: Can we think of one individual whose reputation for personal and profession­al integrity has not been sullied or diminished by that individual’s close identifica­tion with the Trump White House?

But never mind. President Trump told NBC News, “Regardless of (the deputy attorney general’s) recommenda­tion, I was going to fire Comey.” He said Comey was guilty of being a “showboat” and a “grandstand­er.” Being called a showboat by the narcissist in the Oval Office is like

being called ugly by a frog.

The credibilit­y of and public confidence in this White House and its elected occupant are being depleted almost daily. Does Donald Trump have the courage or the selfconfid­ence that President Gerald Ford did in October 1974 when he became the first U.S. president since Abraham Lincoln to voluntaril­y testify before Congress in defending his pardon of the disgraced Richard Nixon? For this presidency, time is short and the challenge is grave.

To find out more about Mark Shields and read his past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at www.creators.com.

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