The Mercury News

Emergency! Trump needs to fabricate another crisis!

- By Dana Milbank Dana Milbank is a Washington Post columnist.

WASHINGTON >> Robert Mueller is circling, recessiona­ry clouds are building and Democrats are rising to power. For President Trump, this can mean only one thing: It's time to fabricate a new crisis.

And that's exactly what he's doing.

Trump summoned Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi to the Oval Office on Tuesday for what was supposed to be a negotiatin­g session about border security. Instead, he used them as props in an impromptu, 17-minute reality TV show.

“Look, we have to have the wall,” Trump bellowed at the Democratic Senate and House leaders — seated awkwardly on couches — while the TV cameras rolled. “This is a national emergency. Drugs are pouring into our country. People with tremendous medical difficulty and medical problems are pouring in, and in many cases it's contagious.”

Emergency! Drugs and contagion! And then, a threat: “If we don't get what we want one way or the other . ... I will shut down the government, absolutely.”

Pelosi, D-Calif., who later said she felt like the “mom” in the room, appealed to a raving Trump to calm down, saying, “We're coming in, in good faith, to negotiate with you about how we can keep the government open.”

But Trump had no such purpose in mind. He was practicing leadership as he knows it: Deliberate­ly throw everything into turmoil, see what emerges, and then claim victory regardless of outcome. He kept taunting the two Democrats, mocking their words to the cameras, scowling and interrupti­ng. “You know, Nancy's in a situation where it's not easy for her to talk right now,” he told the cameras, referring to a Democratic leadership challenge in the House.

“Mr. President,” Pelosi replied icily, “please don't characteri­ze the strength that I bring to this meeting as the leader of the House Democrats, who just won a big victory.” Schumer, D-N.Y., slouching on the couch opposite, added: “Elections have consequenc­es, Mr. President.”

Vice President Pence, seated at Trump's right, watched with the enthusiasm of a norovirus victim at a tennis match because Trump's claim of ownership of a possible government shutdown was a debacle for congressio­nal Republican­s, who lost some 40 House seats in a midterm campaign fought over the president's phony border crisis and who had been trying pre-emptively to label the confrontat­ion the “Schumer shutdown.”

But the spectacle suited Trump perfectly. His presidency has been one long series of self-generated crises, which he then resolves by more-orless accepting a restored status quo. He is the arsonist who demands credit for dousing the fire.

This has happened with North Korea (which went from “fire and fury” to “love” with no concrete change in the country's nuclear program); NATO (whose members reiterated their previous pledges after Trump's harangue); the North American Free Trade Agreement (which was updated with minor amendments after Trump's threat to tear it up) and variations of the same pattern over trade with Europe; deferred action for “dreamers”; family separation­s; the caravan; the ongoing China trade showdown; and now the shutdown threat.

The shutdown is a bit of a bluff. Even the current Republican majority in the House doesn't have enough votes for Trump's border wall.

Trump also undermined himself by claiming that, under current funding, which Democrats have approved, “tremendous amounts of wall have already been built.”

Um, so why the “crisis” and need for a shutdown?

The country will suffer yet another trauma, Republican­s will take another political hit, the status quo will be maintained, and Trump will take credit.

 ?? MARK WILSON GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump argues with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi as Vice President Mike Pence, second from left, looks on in the Oval Office on Tuesday in Washington, D.C.
MARK WILSON GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump argues with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi as Vice President Mike Pence, second from left, looks on in the Oval Office on Tuesday in Washington, D.C.

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