The Day

Trump’s presidency is now all but over

It has taken the present set of crises to reveal the depths of his selfabsorb­ed abdication.

- ROBERT REICH Tribune Content Agency

You’d be forgiven if you hadn’t noticed. His verbal bombshells are louder than ever, but Donald J. Trump is no longer president of the United States. By having no constructi­ve response to any of the monumental crises now convulsing America, Trump has abdicated his office.

He is not governing. He’s golfing, watching cable TV and tweeting.

How has Trump responded to the widespread unrest following the murder in Minneapoli­s of George Floyd, a black man who died while a white police officer knelt on his neck for nine minutes as he was handcuffed on the ground? Trump called the protesters “thugs” and threatened to have them shot. “When the looting starts, the shooting starts,” he tweeted, parroting a former Miami police chief whose words spurred race riots in the late 1960s.

On Saturday, he gloated about “the most vicious dogs, and most ominous weapons” awaiting protesters outside the White House should they ever break through Secret Service lines.

Trump’s response to the last three ghastly months of mounting disease and death has been just as heedless. Since claiming COVID-19 was a Democratic “hoax” and muzzling public health officials, he has punted management of the coronaviru­s to the states.

Governors have had to find ventilator­s to keep patients alive and protective equipment for hospital staff and other essential workers who lack it, often bidding against each other. They have had to decide how, when and where to reopen their economies.

Trump has claimed “no responsibi­lity at all” for testing and contact-tracing — the keys to containing the virus. His new “plan” places responsibi­lity on states to do their own testing and contact-tracing.

Trump is also AWOL in the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

More than 41 million Americans are jobless. In the coming weeks, temporary eviction moratorium­s are set to end in half of the states. One-fifth of Americans missed rent payments this month. Extra unemployme­nt benefits are set to expire at the end of July.

What is Trump’s response? Like Herbert Hoover, who in 1930 said “the worst is behind us” as thousands starved, Trump says the economy will improve and does nothing about the growing hardship. The Democratic-led House passed a $3 trillion relief package on May 15. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has recessed the Senate. Trump calls the bill dead on arrival.

What about other pressing issues a real president would be addressing? The House has passed nearly 400 bills this term, including measures to reduce climate change, enhance election security, require background checks on gun sales, reauthoriz­e the Violence Against Women Act and reform campaign finance. All are languishin­g in McConnell’s inbox. Trump doesn’t seem aware of any of them.

There is nothing inherently wrong with golfing, watching television and tweeting. But if that’s pretty much all that a president does when the nation is engulfed in crises, he is not a president.

Trump’s tweets are no substitute for governing. They are mostly about getting even.

When he’s not fomenting violence against black protesters, he’s accusing a media personalit­y of committing murder, retweeting slurs about a black female politician’s weight and the House speaker’s looks, conjuring up conspiraci­es against himself, supposedly organized by Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, and encouragin­g his followers to “liberate” their states from lockdown restrictio­ns.

He tweets bogus threats that he has no power to carry out — such as withholdin­g funds from states that expand absentee voting, “overruling” governors who don’t allow places of worship to reopen “right away,” designatin­g anti-fascism activists as terrorists, and punishing Twitter for fact-checking him. And he lies incessantl­y. In reality, Donald Trump doesn’t run the U.S. government. He doesn’t manage anything. He doesn’t organize anyone. He doesn’t administer or oversee or supervise. He doesn’t read memos. He hates meetings. He has no patience for briefings. His White House is in perpetual chaos.

His advisors aren’t truth-tellers. They’re toadies, lackeys, sycophants and relatives.

Since moving into the Oval Office in January 2017, Trump hasn’t shown an ounce of interest in governing. He obsesses only about himself.

But it has taken the present set of crises to reveal the depths of his self-absorbed abdication — his utter contempt for his job, his total repudiatio­n of his office. This nonfeasanc­e goes far beyond an absence of leadership or inattentio­n to traditiona­l norms and roles. In a time of national trauma, he has relinquish­ed the core duties and responsibi­lities of the presidency.

He is no longer president. The sooner we stop treating him as if he were, the better.

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