The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump’s arrogant doctrine: I can do whatever I want

- E.J. Dionne Jr. He writes for the Washington Post.

Two issues are paramount in American politics. The first is whether President Donald Trump will get away with his arrogant dismissal of the public’s right to a transparen­t government free of corrupting conflicts of interest. The second is whether those who would hold him to account remain focused, mobilized and determined.

They are related. There are many reasons to stand against Trump, but the one that should take precedence — because it is foundation­al for decent governance — is his autocratic assumption that he is above the expectatio­ns that apply to us normal humans.

Should Trump separate himself completely from his business interests, as presidents had been doing for more than four decades? His implicit message is always: No, I can do what I want.

Should he release his income tax returns so the public can see where conflicts might exist — including whether he will benefit from his own tax proposals? No, he says, I can do what I want.

Should he continue President Barack Obama’s practice of making the White House visitors’ log public so all can know who might be influencin­g his policies? No, he says, I can do what I want — including shutting down access to those logs and telling citizens to go stuff it if they claim any right to know what’s going on in the building they collective­ly own.

Should he stop turning the presidency into a permanent and profitable vacation by spending one out of every five minutes at Mar-a-Lago or a nearby golf course, as The Washington Post’s Philip Bump reported? Should we know the full cost of his gallivanti­ng and how many of the millions of dollars involved are circulatin­g back to his family through the charges Trump’s resorts impose on the government? No, he says, I can do what I want.

Should we know why it is that, according to the Post’s Greg Miller, Trump “appears increasing­ly isolated within his own administra­tion” in calling for warmer relations with Russia even as almost everyone else in his government issues “blistering critiques of Moscow”? Should he disclose details of his business ties to Russian interests and oligarchs? Should he stop resisting investigat­ions into whether his campaign was complicit in Russia’s interferen­ce in the election that made him president? No, he says, I can do what I want.

And then there was Sunday’s referendum in Turkey (whose outcome the opposition says was rigged) that narrowly approved constituti­onal changes giving President Recep Erdogan nearly authoritar­ian powers. Did Trump express concern about democracy? Nope. He called Erdogan to congratula­te him. Why?

And a last question: If Hillary Clinton had done any one of the things described above, is there any doubt about what Republican­s in Congress would be saying and doing? As long as all but an honorable few Republican­s remain silent, GOP leaders will be miring their party in the muck of Trump’s norm-breaking. No, they are saying, he can do what he wants.

This is why only pressure from an engaged and resolute citizenry must send a clear message to the president: No, you can’t just do what you want in crushing transparen­cy and blurring all lines between your own interests and the public’s.

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