The Palm Beach Post

President Trump falls short on promise to make deals

- Robert Reich He is former U.S. Secretary of Labor and is professor of public policy at the University of California at Berkeley.

Donald Trump promised to be America’s dealmaker in chief.

“We need a leader that wrote ‘The Art of the Deal,’ ” he said in the speech announcing his candidacy. “I’m a negotiator. I’ve done very well over the years through negotiatio­n,” he said during a Republican debate. “That’s what I do, is deals,” he said in May. “I know deals, I think, better than anybody knows deals.”

But so far, Trump has made no deals at all, and the ones he thinks he’s made have unraveled.

He has no deal with

North Korea. Following his June 12 summit with Kim Jong Un, Trump declared on Twitter that “there is no longer a nuclear threat” from North Korea.

In fact, recent satellite images show that North Korea has made upgrades to a nuclear facility. It also appears to be finalizing the expansion of a ballistic missile manufactur­ing site.

Instead of surrenderi­ng its nuclear stockpile, American intelligen­ce says North Korea is considerin­g ways to conceal it at secret production facilities.

But Kim got everything he wanted from the summit — an American president appearing to grant North Korea co-equal status, and cancellati­on of joint military exercises with South Korea — without conceding a thing on weapons and missile programs.

Trump has no trade deals, either. Instead, he’s launched simultaneo­us trade wars with Europe, China, Canada and Mexico.

After slapping tariffs on $34 billion of Chinese imports, China has retaliated with tariffs on $34 billion of American exports. Trump is now threatenin­g tariffs on nearly everything China exports to the United States, as well as a clampdown on Chinese investment here.

After Trump raised tariffs on steel and aluminum from Canada, Mexico and the European Union, they also retaliated. They promise further retaliatio­n if Trump acts on his threat to place a 20 percent tariff on cars and car parts imported from Europe.

Trump’s actions have poisoned relations to such an extent that instead of joining the United States to, say, push China to open its markets, our trading partners — including China — are starting to join together to stop Trump from doing worse damage.

Meanwhile, talks to revise the North American Free Trade Agreement with Mexico and Canada are dead, partly because Trump’s bullying has generated so much animosity across our two neighbors’ borders.

Trump will soon meet with Vladimir Putin — but with no apparent agenda.

Over the past few weeks, Trump has given away his bargaining leverage with Putin anyway. He’s called for Russia to be readmitted to the Group of 7 industrial powers, suggested it has a legitimate claim to Crimea and expressed more doubts about whether Moscow meddled in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

He got no deal on replacing the Affordable Care Act, so Trump is quietly repealing it administra­tively. At least 5 million people will lose coverage.

There is no deal on DACA or immigratio­n, despite Trump’s promises. No budget deal. Even the tax deal wasn’t really Trump’s. It was a deal between the Republican Senate and Republican House.

One of the biggest cons from the biggest con man to occupy the Oval Office is that he’s a dealmaker.

He’s not. After a year and a half of this, it’s clear that all he really knows is how to bully friends, stage photo ops with enemies, and claim victory.

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