The Arizona Republic

Trump’s legacy clouded by impeachmen­ts, riot

- Michael Collins and David Jackson

WASHINGTON – Ronald Reagan set the standard for judging a president’s success when, as a candidate for the office in 1980, he famously asked Americans: “Are you better off than you were four years ago?”

It’s a test historians

Trump has failed.

Trump, whose presidency ends Wednesday after four tumultuous years, leaves behind a nation wounded by an attempted insurrecti­on, scarred by racial and political divisions that he inflamed, ravaged by a deadly coronaviru­s pandemic whose severity he initially downplayed and crippled by doubts among many of its citizens about democratic principles like the rule of law, a fair electoral process and an uninhibite­d free press.

“I suspect he will go down as the worst president in American history,” said historian and author Ron Chernow, who has written biographie­s of George Washington, Ulysses Grant and Alexander Hamilton.

“I can’t imagine there’s anyone in America today, whether Republican or Democrat, whether they’re a Trump supporter or Trump opponent, who feels good about the state of the country after four years of Donald Trump,” Chernow said.

Trump leaves office as the only American president to be impeached twice — a record many historians and political scholars say he earned by spreading lies about his loss to Democrat Joe Biden in the November election and inciting a mob attack on the U.S. Capitol, the most egregious assault on the seat of democracy since the War of 1812.

Trump’s defenders — and there are many, almost all of them Republican­s — said recent events will indeed damage his reputation, but they pointed to longterm accomplish­ments that also will resonate beyond his term: tax cuts, regulatory rollbacks, confrontin­g China over unfair trade practices, and recordbrea­king rises in the stock market.

Many pointed to Trump’s legacy in federal law, which they said will be felt for decades to come. Trump appointed more than 200 judges, including three new members of the U.S. Supreme Court, solidifyin­g the high court’s conservati­ve majority.

“President Trump’s political success in nominating judges to the federal judiciary has been historic,” said Tory L. Lucas, a law professor at Liberty University School of Law in Lynchburg, Virginia. “One would have to go back decades to find a comparable record on the number of confirmed federal judges in a single term.”

Trump’s political legacy will be complex, but he’ll be remembered partly for exposing “the fragility of democracy,” said Joanne B. Freeman, a professor of history and American studies at Yale University.

“Americans have long seen American democracy as unbreakabl­e, immune to the threats that have plagued democracie­s around the world,” said Freeman, author of a pre-Civil War history titled “The Field of Blood: Violence in Congress and the Road to Civil War.”

“American exceptiona­lism has blinded some of us to longstandi­ng and very real gaps in our political foundation,” she said. “Trump gloried in them . ... It’s an ugly legacy, but well-deserved.”

Trump’s response to the deadly coronaviru­s pandemic shrouds his entire record as president, said Jack Pitney, professor of government at Claremont McKenna College in California and author of “Un-American: The Fake Patriotism of Donald J. Trump.”

As the COVID-19 virus spread, Trump claimed it would disappear “like a miracle” even though he acknowledg­ed to journalist Bob Woodward that he knew it was more deadly than he acknowledg­ed publicly. Trump refused to wear a face mask in public and even appeared to suggest injecting disinfecta­nts as a possible cure.

The toll: More than 22 million Americans, including Trump and members of his family, have been infected by the virus. Nearly 400,000 have died.

“If a competent and honest president had been in office, many of them would still be alive,” Pitney said.

say

Donald

The unlikelies­t of presidents

Donald John Trump was an unlikely candidate to become the 45th president of the U.S.

His was the world of real estate and celebritie­s, not politics.

A caustic New Yorker who made a fortune by developing hotels, casinos, golf courses and other real estate properties and through various other business dealings, Trump was a fixture in

Manhattan’s social circles and in the screaming headlines of the city’s tabloids long before he decided to take a stab at politics.

When he finally ran for office, he did it in typical Trumpian fashion, eschewing the slick campaign rollouts favored by other politician­s. Trump kicked off his campaign for the presidency by riding down a golden escalator in Trump Tower and addressing a group of supporters in the lobby of the New York City skyscraper bearing his name.

As a candidate, Trump ran a populist-like campaign that was strong on style, short on substance and prone to stretch the truth to suit his political purposes. He was combative — with Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton, the press, the protesters who frequently disrupted his rallies, and with anyone else who stood in his way. His supporters ate it up.

On Nov. 8, 2016, Trump defied the expectatio­ns of pollsters, pundits and even members of his own party by beating Clinton in the Electoral College but losing the popular vote to her by nearly 3 million votes.

‘Belligeren­t and partisan’

Controvers­y, much of it caused by Trump himself, followed him into the Oval Office and remained a part of his presidency right up the end.

Just one week after taking office, Trump issued an executive order temporaril­y suspending immigratio­n to the United States from seven Muslim-majority countries on the grounds of national security. The travel ban sparked nationwide protests.

His administra­tion separated immigrant children from their parents and held them in cages after they crossed the southern border illegally. Trump himself cozied up to authoritar­ian leaders like North Korea’s Kim Jong Un and Russia’s Vladimir Putin and feuded with U.S. allies like Canada’s Justin Trudeau and France’s Emmanuel Macron.

Even fellow Republican­s were incensed when he claimed there were “very fine people” on both sides after violent protests erupted between white nationalis­ts and counterpro­testers at a rally in Charlottes­ville, Virginia. When activists marched in the streets and demanded racial justice after the deaths of George Floyd in Minnesota and Breonna Taylor in Kentucky — Black Americans who died at the hands of police — Trump denounced the protesters as “thugs.”

When most people become president, “it transforms them,” Chernow said. “They feel the majesty and the gravity of the office, and it elevates their behavior.

“Donald Trump is a case where, during his presidency, he has only looked smaller and more belligeren­t and partisan as time has gone on. He has really governed as the president of the red states of America.”

‘A wrecking ball’

Despite his abrasive style, Trump scored some remarkable achievemen­ts on his watch, his defenders say.

Trump leaves office the same way he entered: as “a political wrecking ball,”

said Ari Fleischer, who served as press secretary for President George W. Bush.

“In between, he was a wrecking ball with accomplish­ments,” Fleischer wrote in a column for Fox News.

Fleischer cited drops in the poverty rate during Trump’s presidency, low unemployme­nt rates for Black Americans and Hispanic Americans, and tax and deregulati­on policies that he said benefited blue-collar workers. “Unfortunat­ely, the economic dislocatio­n caused by the coronaviru­s wiped out many of the benefits on the jobs front that Trump had achieved,” Fleischer said.

Fleischer said Trump deserves credit for “resetting” relations with China and standing up to Beijing by using tariffs — “a tool no typical politician­s would have used.”

Trump’s tax cuts and rollback of federal regulation­s “supercharg­ed the American economy, enabling robust job gains and empowering Americans across all walks of life,” said Joel Griffith, a research fellow for the Institute for Economic Freedom and Opportunit­y at The Heritage Foundation, a conservati­ve think tank.

“Unfortunat­ely, many on the left would like to roll back much of this progress,” Griffith said. “And they want to start by eliminatin­g the legislativ­e filibuster — the last line of defense against the far-left policy agenda of massive tax hikes, government-run health care and the Green New Deal that would cripple the economy, crush working Americans, and unravel the gains made in Trump’s pre-pandemic economy.”

Trump’s most enduring influence may be through his appointmen­ts to the federal courts, especially the Supreme Court. His Supreme Court appointmen­ts are historic because they shifted the court’s ideologica­l balance to a 6-3 advantage for conservati­ves and because the three new justices — Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett — were only 49, 53, and 48 years old, respective­ly, when nominated, which means they could serve on the court for decades, said Lucas, the Liberty University law professor.

At this month’s winter meeting of the Republican National Committee, members pointed out that Trump also brought new members into the party, including working-class people from industrial states like Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan and Wisconsin.

“There is no doubt that he has redrawn the political map for our party and proved we can compete and win in nontraditi­onally Republican communitie­s,” party chairwoman Ronna McDaniel said.

But critics say many of what conservati­ves view as Trump’s accomplish­ments will have negative consequenc­es that will be felt for years.

“By cutting taxes without cutting spending, he bloated the federal debt — and that was even before the pandemic,” Pitney said. “The regulatory actions will mean more pollution and workplace injuries. His damage will outweigh any good deeds.”

‘Betrayal’ and impeachmen­t

Both of Trump’s impeachmen­ts were rooted in his deeply partisan antics.

The first involved charges he used

the power of his office to pressure a foreign power to help discredit a political rival, Biden. During a phone call, Trump urged Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, to investigat­e Biden and his son Hunter Biden, who sat on the board of directors of a Ukrainian energy company. The Democratic-controlled House voted on Dec. 18, 2019, to impeach Trump on charges of abuse of power and obstructio­n of justice, but the GOPcontrol­led Senate acquitted him on both charges the following month.

Last week, just one year after his first impeachmen­t, the House impeached Trump again.

This time, he was charged with inciting an insurrecti­on by whipping up a pro-Trump crowd that proceeded to march on the Capitol as lawmakers were counting electoral votes from the November presidenti­al election, which Trump lost to Biden. The angry mob broke into the building, forcing some lawmakers to flee for their safety and others to crouch under their desks in fear. Five people died in the riot, which disrupted the vote counting for several hours.

In the week before the attack, Trump claimed the election was rigged and threatened Republican state officials and lawmakers who refused his demands to void some of Biden’s electoral votes. He lied to supporters about what was possible in relation to overturnin­g the election, inflaming the kind of fury on display during the Capitol riot.

“There has never been a greater betrayal by a president of the United States of his office and his oath to the Constituti­on,” said Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, the third-highest-ranking Republican in the House and one of 10 who broke ranks with her party and voted for Trump’s impeachmen­t.

Trump’s trial in the Senate won’t be held until he leaves office. One possibilit­y that lawmakers are exploring is banning him from ever running for federal office again.

No matter what happens, Trump and his supporters will likely continue to lie about the election, seeking to undermine both the Biden presidency and faith in the American political system, experts said.

“Donald Trump will be remembered as a ‘calamitous failure’ president,” said Jennifer Mercieca, associate professor of communicat­ion at Texas A&M University.

Trump “took a stable nation and turned it into crisis, then failed to solve the crises that occurred on his watch,” said Mercieca, author of “Demagogue for President: the Rhetorical Genius of Donald Trump.”

Even with Trump out of office, the scars of his presidency will take a long time to heal, historians say.

“When someone becomes president of the United States, they are handed the most precious and fragile object in the world, which is the American democratic system,” Chernow said. “The most important thing is for them to preserve that and pass it along intact to their successor.

“Donald Trump, instead of preserving that precious legacy has really shattered it,” he said. “And it’s going to take a long time for us to repair that democratic system.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP FILE ?? President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un talk in Singapore in 2018. In his time in office, Trump drew mixed reactions for cozying up to authoritar­ian leaders like Kim and Russia’s Vladimir Putin.
EVAN VUCCI/AP FILE President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un talk in Singapore in 2018. In his time in office, Trump drew mixed reactions for cozying up to authoritar­ian leaders like Kim and Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

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