The Mercury News Weekend

Will Trump supporters ever decide to abandon his side?

- By E. J. Dionne Jr. E. J. Dionne Jr. is a Washington Post columnist.

WASHINGTON » We are past the time when mournful comments about President Trump’s disgracefu­l behavior are sufficient. It is no longer defensible for his lieutenant­s or Republican­s in Congress to tell themselves that they’re staying close to Trump to contain the damage he could cause our country.

If their actual goal was to prevent damage, they have failed. True, we have not had a nuclear war and Trump hasn’t shut down our democracy. But if this is the standard, if these are genuine fears, then Trump should have been gone long ago. A man this unstable, self-involved, uninformed, divisive and amoral — a polite word in his case — should be nowhere near the levers of power.

It should embarrass all who work in the White House that after Trump’s unhinged news conference on Tuesday, they were reduced to insisting, on background, that everything the president said was unplanned, off-script and shocking to them.

If they are so appalled by this man, why do they stick with him? Why do his chief economic adviser Gary Cohn, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, Transporta­tion Secretary Elaine Chao and chief of staff John Kelly keep standing there? Kelly was supposed to turn this White House around. But since he arrived, Trump’s troubles have only deepened. A much-honored Marine cannot possibly want this as his legacy.

Can any policy victory be worth it for Cohn and Mnuchin to absorb the damage further complicity with Trump will do to their reputation­s? As for Chao, her boss had already gone after her husband, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, even before he distanced himself from Trump on Wednesday. “There are no good neo-Nazis,” McConnell said. “And those who espouse their views are not supporters of American ideals and freedoms.” Both Chao and McConnell have big decisions to make.

And every member of the administra­tion should read Sohrab Ahmari’s warning on Commentary magazine’s website to his fellow conservati­ves “who are convinced that a responsibl­e, presidenti­al Trump is just around the corner.” Ahmari concludes: “He will always disappoint you. And with each disappoint­ment comes a fresh dose of humiliatio­n.”

In 1996, three members of President Clinton’s administra­tion stood up for their beliefs by resigning in disagreeme­nt with his decision to sign a welfare reform bill. Shouldn’t opposition to neo-Nazis and white supremacis­ts inspire an even more urgent devotion to principle? Will no one in the Trump orbit send the most powerful message possible by leaving his court in defense of decency?

Clearly, many CEOs have reached the conclusion that continued engagement with Trump is a bad idea. The president was thus forced to disband two business advisory councils Wednesday because so many corporate executives were fleeing. There’s a lesson here.

Many Republican­s in Congress have scrambled to disassocia­te themselves publicly from the president’s Trump Tower fiasco. But it’s not enough. They need to rebuke Trump by name and support a congressio­nal resolution to do so formally.

Every new Trump outrage seems to invite bold declaratio­ns that this time will be the end of the line. If this week’s spectacle of moral obtuseness isn’t the breaking point, may God save our republic.

 ?? JIM WATSON — AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? President Trump speaks to the media about the protests in Charlottes­ville, Va., on Tuesday at Trump Tower in New York.
JIM WATSON — AFP/GETTY IMAGES President Trump speaks to the media about the protests in Charlottes­ville, Va., on Tuesday at Trump Tower in New York.

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