The Oklahoman

Yes, 2016 campaign is long over

- CREATORS.COM Michael Barone mbarone@washington­examiner.com

If you keep up with the news, you might think that the unpleasant and unedifying 2016 presidenti­al campaign is still going on. President Trump, up early, is sending out tweets coarsely attacking foreign leaders and American politician­s. Runner-up Hillary Clinton is supervisin­g a busy staff, which, after she takes an hour for exercise, fills her in on the 60 minutes’ latest news developmen­ts. A leader of the “resistance” should always be prepared.

Charitably-minded observers may excuse both of these individual­s, neither of whom expected 12 months ago to be in the places and positions they are today. And they might add that they’re not the only ones continuing to operate in campaign mode.

Rush Limbaugh proclaims that “American voters saved this country as we know it.” Or, to be more precise, the 46 percent of American voters responsibl­e for securing 304 electoral votes for Trump did.

Limbaugh is right that Trump’s victory has had important policy consequenc­es, from the appointmen­t of Justice Neil Gorsuch to the renunciati­on of the unenforcea­ble strictures of the Paris climate agreement. More, although probably not so many as most Trump voters would like, are in store.

On the other side, 43 percent of respondent­s to a Politico/Morning Consult poll want Congress to begin impeachmen­t proceeding­s against Trump. More than half of those people think he has proved “he is unfit to serve and should be removed from office, regardless of whether he committed an impeachabl­e offense or not.”

These folks want a revote, right now. For them, the campaign is still on — as it may still be for the next 17 months, if in 2018 Democratic House candidates make impeachmen­t a main plank of their platforms.

Amid the continuing campaign chatter, let’s step back and ponder how current events will be regarded in the longer run of history.

Trump’s capture of 70 previously Democratic electoral votes in the Midwest and Pennsylvan­ia owes much to his distinctiv­e stands on immigratio­n and trade, even though the problems he cited are of declining importance. Illegal immigratio­n across the Mexican border fell off sharply in 2007, and the reduction in American jobs because of Chinese imports probably crested several years before.

That positions him as president to claim credit for trends that are ongoing, albeit his policies are arguably accelerati­ng them. Illegal border crossings are apparently way down this year. Manufactur­ing jobs may be rising, too, as rising Chinese wages make Chinese goods less competitiv­e here.

On foreign policy, Trump has abandoned Barack Obama’s tilt to Iran and stitched together an informal anti-Iran coalition in the Middle East. He may have persuaded China to exert some discipline over North Korea and has accelerate­d the long-standing missile defense program to protect America from any Kim Jong Un nukes.

As for Europe, he and German Chancellor Angela Merkel both have benefited politicall­y from trading news conference and Twitter insults. Merkel is strengthen­ed for her Sept. 24 election, and Trump can claim to have spurred Europeans to take more responsibi­lity for their own defense.

This is starting to look like a more convention­al Republican foreign policy than campaign rhetoric suggested. Congressio­nal Democrats seem to have stalled in their efforts to find some Team Trump collusion with Russia that would justify the impeachmen­t proceeding­s their party’s base expects and lusts for — perhaps because an investigat­ion could show that the Obama administra­tion surveilled and criminally unmasked Americans for political reasons.

I’m happy to join those urging Trump and Clinton to stop acting like candidates. But maybe the rest of us should take a deep breath and stop acting as if the campaign were still on.

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