Texarkana Gazette

Trump’s still campaignin­g when he needs to govern

- Andrew Malcom

At the end of last year’s presidenti­al campaign, a sufficient number of voters in just the right places elected Donald Trump to go shoot up Washington and fundamenta­lly change the way it operates.

He’s got the shooting part down just fine. But the big change part not so much.

In fact, 30 weeks after he took office Trump is still shooting wild words and tweets at most anyone who criticizes him, hints at criticizin­g him or just moves.

Some Trump advocates say “You tell ‘em!” But some sup- porters and others who don’t like the boastful New Yorker but had hoped he could deliver some necessary fundamenta­l changes are starting to have serious doubts.

The 71-year-old Trump always wants to project strength and power. And he tried to show that in his Afghan speech this week. There’s a reason the real estate mogul did not build or rehab small buildings. And taking on the Washington establishm­ent and the entrenched way it does business is no small task either.

In fact, it’s a huge, perhaps impossible task because the Congress, the bureaucrac­y, the lobbyists and especially the media there see their power, influence, job security and incomes threatened by outsider changes to the status quo.

And many of them are quietly seeking to undermine Trump’s efforts with slow-walks, steady leaks, passive-aggressive behavior and an astounding media animus that’s lowered their public standing beneath even Trump’s. This all wounds the rookie president and prompts him to say more counter-productive, even false things.

Changing Washington would be a herculean, long-term task for even a savvy, discipline­d executive with vision and keen political skills. Which Trump is not.

His achievemen­ts, direct and indirect, have actually been many—Keystone Pipeline, VA reforms, regulation rollbacks, advances against the Islamic State and MS 13, one million-plus new jobs, illegal immigratio­n down, low unemployme­nt despite many re-entering the labor force, soaring mortgage applicatio­ns, consumer confidence and stock markets, among others.

You might notice that most of his achievemen­ts—pulling out of TPP and the Paris Accord, for example—could be done unilateral­ly by him. As have some negative things like staff turmoil. Things that require teamwork come harder. Take the prolonged disaster that was Obamacare repeal, please.

It’s surprising that someone so successful in conceiving, assembling and driving big projects in the real world finds it so difficult to drive legislator­s of his own party to accomplish big projects in Washington. Yes, legislator­s are often hypocritic­al, egotistica­l, selfish, self-important, small-minded, parochial men and women with the collective motto “Ubi Est Mea” (Where’s mine?).

But our form of government contains three equal branches for a reason, to deny any of them the power to dominate.

Trump’s a great cajoler. Unfortunat­ely, he’s an awful convincer. Or a lazy one. One might expect a military prep school graduate to have absorbed some self-discipline. Instead, he indulges in recriminat­ory tweets about has-been TV hosts on a marginal channel, giving them a ratings boost and making himself seem petty.

He criticizes Democrat leaders, of course. But he bitterly attacks leaders of his own GOP, the ones who preserved the Supreme Court vacancy for him and got his nominee through. The same ones he will need for any hope of legislativ­e successes like tax reform in this crucial first year.

Last week’s White House message was the desperate national need for infrastruc­ture repairs, perhaps a trillion dollars worth. Jobs. Growth. A better country. Trump touted his plan at a news conference. Then he demolished its coverage by indulging in punching back at people who charged his Charlottes­ville reactions were incomplete, insensitiv­e, even racist.

Boy, Trump sure told them. He has a right to do that, of course. But a need? Those critics now know how to get this president off-message and shooting wildly again.

Remember when campaignin­g Trump criticized the U.S. intelligen­ce community as incompeten­t? Guess where these national security leaks emanate?

Remember when Trump criticized Arizona GOP Sen. John McCain, saying the man who survived six years of POW torture was no hero because he got captured? Perhaps that felt good to punch back for some past perceived slight. But to what productive presidenti­al end?

Now, guess who rose from a cancer treatment bed to fly cross-country and cast the deciding Senate vote that killed Trump’s oft-promised Obamacare repeal?

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