The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Stormy Daniels proves equal match for Trump’s bombast

- Clarence Page He writes for the Chicago Tribune.

Those who say the Stormy Daniels interview March 25 on “60 Minutes” contained nothing new missed the historical importance of what they were viewing: how Daniels has become President Donald Trump’s kryptonite.

Throughout his political rise we have seen former reality TV star Trump use every available form of threat, insult, lawsuit and bombast to silence his opponents and frighten off future opposition, if they couldn’t be quietly bought off.

And now along comes Stephanie Clifford, known profession­ally as Stormy Daniels, who has alleged that Trump engaged in an extramarit­al fling with her, that his minions intimidate­d her legally and physically to prevent her public disclosure of the affair and that just before the 2016 election Trump’s fixer paid her $130,000 in hush money to keep her silence.

What’s downright historic here is how she not only refused to stay bought, but actually strategica­lly turned the tables on Trump to beat him at his own game.

Sixty-three percent of Americans surveyed in a new CNN poll, taken before Sunday’s “60 Minutes” broadcast, say they believe women who have come forward with allegation­s of extramarit­al affairs with Trump.

Yet, far beyond the point at which Trump would have rebranded other attackers with an impolite nickname and other withering insults, he’s been no more eager to mention her name than he has been to slime Vladimir Putin.

Trump’s usual defenses simply don’t work on her. She has taken an important source of Trump’s rhetorical power, a lack of shame, and turned it into his kryptonite.

Let me count the ways:

1. Shamelessn­ess has its advantages. Trump typically rattles his opponents with character attacks (remember “Crooked Hillary”?), even if he has to turn to phony conspiracy theories despite a lack of evidence to back them up.

But Daniels takes the opposite approach. Unlike politician­s trying to protect their blue-ribbon reputation­s, she claims no blue-ribbon reputation to protect. She is what she is, a writer, director and performer in pornograph­ic movies.

2. Roll the trolls. She not only refuses to be intimidate­d by foul-mouthed Twitter trolls and other critics, she effortless­ly turns their trash into gold with responses that have become a binge-worthy reality show of their own.

In another response to a Twitter put-down, she tweeted, “At least the sewer won’t reject you although you’re probably used to rejection by now.”

3. Not a “victim.” Even though her charges against Trump sound at first blush like the harassment and sexual assault charges that brought down moviemaker Harvey Weinstein and ignited the #MeToo movement, Daniels has repeatedly pointed out that “I’m not a ‘me too.’”

Wisely, she took responsibi­lity for her own actions, even when she says she realized she had put herself where she had not intended to be, Trump’s bed.

Interestin­gly, as the world turned to Twitter to see what Trump might tweet the next morning, he maintained an unusual Twitter silence regarding Daniels except for one unusually vague message Monday:

“So much Fake News. Never been more voluminous or more inaccurate,” it said. “But through it all, our country is doing great!”

Right. Just great. How well our country’s president is doing sounds like another story.

Jay Bookman’s column returns soon.

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