The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

When a diminishin­g president is a good thing

- George F. Will He writes for the Washington Post.

Looking, as prudent people are disincline­d to do, on the bright side, there are a few vagrant reasons for cheerfulne­ss, beginning with this: Summer love is sprouting like dandelions. To the list of history’s sublime romances — Abelard and Heloise, Romeo and Juliet, Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy — add the torrid affair between Anthony Scaramucci and Donald Trump. The former’s sizzling swoon for the latter is the most remarkable public display of hormonal heat since Jeff Sessions tumbled into love with Trump. Long ago. Last year.

“To see what is in front of one’s nose,” George Orwell wrote, “needs a constant struggle.” Trump is something the nation did not know it needed — a feeble president whose manner can cure the nation’s excessive fixation with the presidency.

Executive power expanded, with only occasional pauses, throughout the 20th century and has surged in the 21st. After 2001, “The Decider” decided to start a preventive war and to countenanc­e torture prohibited by treaty and statute. His successor had “a pen and a phone,” an indifferen­ce to the Constituti­on’s Take Care Clause and disdain for the separation of powers, for which he was repeatedly rebuked by the Supreme Court.

Fortunatel­y, today’s president is so innocent of informatio­n that Congress cannot continue deferring to executive policymaki­ng.

Furthermor­e, today’s president is doing invaluable damage to Americans’ infantiliz­ing assumption that the presidency magically envelops its occupant with a nimbus of seriousnes­s. After the president went to West Virginia to harangue some Boy Scouts about his magnificen­ce and persecutio­ns, he confessed to Ohioans that Lincoln, but only Lincoln, was more “presidenti­al” than he. So much for the austere and reticent first president, who, when the office was soft wax, tried to fashion a style of dignity compatible with republican simplicity.

Fastidious people who worry that the president’s West Virginia and Ohio performanc­es — the alpha male as crybaby — diminished the presidency are missing the point, which is: For now, worse is better. There will be 42 more months of this president’s increasing­ly hilarious-beyond-satire apotheosis of himself, leavened by his incessant whining about his tribulatio­ns. This protracted learning experience might whet the public’s appetite for an adult president confident enough to wince at, and disdain, the adoration of his most comically groveling hirelings.

The smitten Scaramucci is himself evidence of something encouragin­g: Upward social aspiration is still as American as Jay Gatsby.

When plighting his troth to Trump, Scaramucci repeatedly confessed his “love” for his employer, thereby exceeding Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin’s comparativ­ely pallid testimonia­l to the president’s “superhuman” health. Scaramucci grew up in Port Washington, the Long Island community that is East Egg in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby.” Gatsby lived in West Egg, yearning to live across the water, where shone the beckoning green light at the end of Daisy’s dock. Scaramucci’s ascent to a glory surpassing even that available in East Egg shows that the light on the lectern in the White House press room is something commensura­te to his capacity for wonder.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States