The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

The president is not the enemy

- Cal Thomas Contact Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@tribpub.com.

The Establishm­ent, a construct of Democrats and Republican­s that rules in Washington no matter which party controls government, appears to be over its fainting spell following Donald Trump’s election. It is now throwing everything at him from a daily — make that hourly, even minute by minute — onslaught of investigat­ions to big media’s equivalent of Molotov cocktails. Washington, D.C., recently made assisted suicide legal. The president isn’t helping his cause by committing unassisted political suicide. Changing his chief of staff may help, but significan­t change must come from the president, himself. Name-calling by the president and his critics accomplish­es nothing, other than to make the name-caller feel good. In my experience, name-calling changes few minds. Winning an argument is better than disparagin­g someone who holds a different view. The way to defeat your opponent is to present a better idea. In the case of the Establishm­ent, the president should not only talk How’s this for a slogan, borrowed out of context from former president Obama: “If you like your Establishm­ent, you can keep your Establishm­ent”? The problem today is that we have exchanged what was once common sense for nonsense. Look at what consumes our attention — transgende­r soldiers in the military, celebritie­s, leaks from the administra­tion and gossip. It is junk food for the mind. Here’s a positive suggestion. Let the new White House meet chief of staff, Gen. John Kelly, with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Speaker Paul Ryan. Give them a list of programs and policies the president would like to pass (or repeal) and ask the two leaders to poll their members to see what they could vote for. Then let Gen. Kelly receive from the leaders what congressio­nal Republican­s could support specifical­ly about its many failures — from health insurance to winning wars, or invading countries where we don’t belong, but also present a list of alternativ­es he believes will work. In the case of the Establishm­ent, the president should not only talk specifical­ly about its many failures — from health insurance to winning wars, or invading countries where we don’t belong, but also present a list of alternativ­es he believes will work. and vote for. Somewhere in between is enough common ground to repeal legislatio­n and programs that aren’t working and create new ones that will work, based on experience, not ideology. The president can then hit the road and sell an agenda he and his party, and maybe some Democrats, can agree on.

The president deserves credit for eliminatin­g regulation­s that have been choking the economy. It is a major reason why the economy is growing again and the stock market keeps hitting record highs.

He should continue doing things his executive power allows him to do.

Calling President Trump a narcissist and “childish” changes nothing. What is the goal of such language? Do the name-callers think he will become something other than what he is, absent a miraculous conversion?

He’s right and when it suits them both left and right engage in this shameful practice.

Better build up this president and the good he can do, as he is the only president we have. North Korea and Iraq are becoming imminent threats. Throwing rhetorical “bombs” at our fellow citizens is not helpful. We are not each other’s enemy.

There are many who wish to destroy us.

Why are we helping them?

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