The Palm Beach Post

Against many stormy odds, Trump reeling in successes

- Ross Douthat He writes for the New York Times.

As Donald Trump entered his second year in office, he seemed determined to destabiliz­e his administra­tion’s fragile status quo. He pushed out a cluster of advisers, replacing them with people he liked watching on TV. He forged ahead on his long-promised policy of trade war. He decided to take the starring, summit-organizing role in his own North Korean brinkmansh­ip. And he stepped up — well, or just continued, it’s hard to make quantitati­ve judgments — his rhetorical war against the Robert Mueller investigat­ion.

For those of us who feared disaster from this presidency but saw the first year as a period when Trump was relatively constraine­d, his

“I’m in charge here!” pivot was a worrying phenomenon. But it’s the nature of the Trump era to confound all expectatio­ns, so naturally what followed the Cohn-Tillerson-McMaster exits and the tariff announceme­nts and the stock market wobbles was ... the most politicall­y successful six weeks of Trump’s presidency to date.

Now “successful” is a relative term: Our president is still deeply unpopular, still under investigat­ion and embroiled in scandal, still unable to push a substantia­l agenda through the Congress, still likely to see his party lose the House of the Representa­tives in November.

But allowing for the low bar, March and April brought a lot of good news for Donald Trump. For one thing, his basic political position has improved: He’s up to 44 percent job approval in the RealClearP­olitics average and 41 percent in FiveThirty­Eight, some of the highest numbers since the beginning of his administra­tion. And his party’s situation has improved, too, with the Democratic generic ballot lead no longer large enough to guarantee a wipeout of the GOP.

This improvemen­t might be surprising if you just follow the drumbeat of scandal coverage in the press, which has arguably only gotten stronger as Trump’s lawyer has fallen under investigat­ion and the Stormy Daniels business has gone from a sideshow to a main attraction.

But while the pace of scandalous news hasn’t slackened, the nature of that news has changed: A scandal that began with the promise of republic-shaking revelation­s about presidenti­al treason is increasing­ly dominated by sex and lies and possible campaign-finance violations — in other words, Clinton-in-the-1990s territory, rather than the Manchurian Candidate scenario.

Mueller may still have revelation­s that could swing the story back to where it began; the Trump supporters who confidentl­y call collusion a “conspiracy theory” seem as overconfid­ent as Russia obsessives cheering every “boom” on Twitter. But it’s very clear that Trump is better off politicall­y with the investigat­ive focus on his attempts to hide his sex life rather than on the Russia business. And while there would be justice in his going down for porn-star shenanigan­s, the partisan reflex on the right is too strong to expect anything save a replay of the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal with the parties’ roles reversed.

Especially since Trump now enjoys an economy whose unemployme­nt rate has fallen to late1990s territory. In this climate, the president isn’t likely to win a trade war, but he can afford to fight a little one, and like Clinton in 1998, he can expect a little more forgivenes­s from voters for his sleaze.

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