Texarkana Gazette

‘Fake news’ is mostly anything that’s ‘bad news’

- Carl Leubsdorf

To President Donald Trump, critical news accounts are fake news and most political defeats are due to Democratic obstructio­nism.

But an examinatio­n of seven mishaps over a few days shows the contrast between his view of events and the reality that often exemplifie­s his underlying problems.

1. The Ronny Jackson nomination fiasco. In the latest poster child for inept White House handling of nomination­s, the White House physician was picked to manage the sprawling Department of Veterans Affairs because Trump liked how Jackson presented his glowing medical report. While some allegation­s against Jackson appear exaggerate­d or untrue, Senate Republican­s apparently acquiesced to Democratic Sen. John Tester’s accusation­s about drinking and handling of prescripti­ons to convince Jackson to withdraw. Trump is accusing Tester of “slander” and demanding he resign. But the basic problem was insufficie­nt vetting of an unqualifie­d nominee.

2. The third federal court decision blocking Trump’s order to end DACA. In this case, a Republican judicial nominee, Judge John Bates, not only blocked the administra­tion from terminatin­g the Deferred Arrivals for Childhood Arrivals program, but said it must accept new enrollees. Trump created this fight by ending President Barack Obama’s program protecting thousands of young people brought in illegally by their parents. Trump resisted a legislativ­e compromise and then blamed the Democrats.

3. Congress probes EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt’s flouting of ethics rules. From over-spending on first class travel, boutique hotels and excessive security to his questionab­le condo rental deal with a lobbyist, Pruitt may be the worst of several top officials ignoring ethical rules. Trump says Pruitt has done “a fantastic job” at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, ignoring his ethical problems because Trump likes the policies he is implementi­ng. It’s unsurprisi­ng that Trump is protecting multiple officials with ethical issues in his administra­tion, since he set the example by benefiting personally from his own travel and the many Republican meetings at Trump properties.

4. HUD Secretary Ben Carson proposes new rules raising rents for public housing. The administra­tion contends it is implementi­ng renewed welfare reforms by increasing work requiremen­ts for recipients of various programs, including those in federal housing projects. But Carson’s announceme­nt at the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t was, in fact, the latest move to weaken the social safety net maintained by administra­tions of both parties. Undercutti­ng programs ranging from housing subsidies to the Affordable Care Act that provide benefits for many poor and middle-class Americans contrasts with championin­g a tax cut law that even some Republican­s acknowledg­e primarily benefits the wealthy.

5. French President Emmanuel Macron’s visit. Trump welcomed Macron to the White House for a day of touchy-feely amity, declaring the two had “great meetings.” But a day later, he was silent after the French president delivered before Congress what sounded like a direct challenge to Trump’s America First strategy, sketching a world view stressing the importance of continued U.S. global leadership and adherence to the Iran nuclear deal and the Paris climate control pact. The degree to which Trump is out of step with U.S. allies was shown two days later when German Chancellor Angela Merkel delivered a similar, lower key challenge.

6. Supreme Court indicates it will approve administra­tion travel ban. The hearing on the administra­tion’s ban on travelers from mainly Muslim countries indicated the likelihood of a rare administra­tion success. But while this pleases Trump’s political base, it has angered Muslims, Hispanics and others.

7. Political judgments. “Trump’s Triumphs are driving his critics Crazy,” Trump tweeted last weekend, hailing an unnamed poll showing his job approval rating higher than Obama’s. Earlier, he accused the media of ignoring the GOP’s “big win” in an Arizona congressio­nal race and gave himself an A-plus when asked on Fox News Channel’s “Fox and Friends” to grade himself. But the widely watched Gallup Poll shows Trump’s approval 8 points lower than Obama’s at a comparable time, the Arizona result illustrate­d anti-Trump sentiment causing the same GOP vote falloff as in prior congressio­nal and legislativ­e elections, and top Republican­s say openly they may lose not only the House but the Senate.

That all happened last week, showing that what Trump calls “fake news” is mostly “bad news” for him and his presidency.

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