The Oklahoman

Presidency not as bad as it sounds

- Rich Lowry @RichLowry

The president of the United States wakes up some mornings seemingly determined to convince as many people as possible that he’s unsuited to high office.

Fortunatel­y for him, he has a Twitter account allowing him to act on this impulse immediatel­y and without any filter.

On Wednesday, Trump retweeted three videos from an apparatchi­k of an extremist party in Britain purporting to show acts of violence by Muslims. One of them is reportedly a fake.

He followed up with a tweet calling for the firing of “Morning Joe” host Joe Scarboroug­h on the basis of a noxious conspiracy theory. (A woman with a heart condition died in Scarboroug­h’s district office when he was a congressma­n. Ever since, a kooky fringe has accused him of murder.)

If a friend on Facebook shared the fake Muslim video, you’d hesitate to credit any of his opinions going forward, let alone bestow on him the biggest megaphone on planet

Earth.

If a candidate for town council called for an investigat­ion of Scarboroug­h for allegedly murdering one of his interns, you’d doubt his fitness to decide whether to approve a zoning permit for an Applebee’s, let alone to wield the world’s most fearsome nuclear arsenal.

Yet Trump’s presidency operates on a largely separate track than his Twitter feed and his other off-script interjecti­ons and pronouncem­ents. His domestic policy is so convention­al that it could have been cooked up by Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell— and, in fact, it was. He’s pursued a largely status quo foreign policy, except more cautious than Barack Obama’s and, especially, George W. Bush’s.

Amid the miasma of manufactur­ed controvers­ies, Trump’s presidency is, as Mark Twain is supposed to have said of Wagner’s music, “better than it sounds.”

A common criticism of Trump is that, via his attacks on offending journalist­ic outlets and jurists, he’s endangerin­g the Constituti­on. He’s certainly violating norms of how a president should conduct himself and speak. But if you got news only of Trump’s official acts and knew nothing of his ongoing commentary, you’d think a rigorously rules-bound president occupied the White House.

The defining feature of Trump’s judicial nominees is a firm commitment to interpreti­ng the Constituti­on and the laws as written. Trump has rolled back Obama administra­tive actions on immigratio­n, the environmen­t and health care that at best pushed the envelope of executive authority and at worst were frankly unconstitu­tional.

In the real world, the economy is growing at a nice clip, and the stock market is humming along, showing no signs that it believes that the republic is about to be destroyed by a “Mad King.”

None of this is to suggest that Trump’s governing and his tweets are entirely distinguis­hable. Some of the tweets have had consequenc­es, and, if nothing else, they are a dismaying window into his state of mind.

The firing of James Comey was a product of the kind of grievance Trump displays on Twitter. Trump’s missives obsessivel­y attacking CNN have created a pall over the Department of Justice’s suit to block the AT&T-Time Warner merger. The specter of the confrontat­ion with North Korea playing out in insults over Twitter is unsettling, to say the least.

But the tweets don’t constitute the sum total of the administra­tion. It’s possible that Trump sees Twitter— and his other provocatio­ns— as a way to stir the pot, entertain himself, stoke his base, flog his enemies and vent his frustratio­ns separate and distinct from decisions of government, undertaken under the influence of, by and large, impressive, wellmeanin­g advisers.

Trump’s presidency is much better than his Twitter feed. Although he stands ready and willing to convince you otherwise, 280 characters at a time.

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