The Record (Troy, NY)

Of course Trump called Comey a liar

- Columnist Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter, @Milbank.

So Donald Trump is calling James Comey a liar.

This puts the fired FBI director in some impressive company. Among those Trump has accused of lying, via pronouncem­ents, tweets and retweets: Ted Cruz Marco Rubio Ben Carson John Kasich Jeb Bush George W. Bush The Bush dynasty Fellow GOP presidenti­al candidates All candidates John McCain Barack Obama The Obama administra­tion Hillary Clinton Tim Kaine Nancy Pelosi Bernie Sanders Democrats The Senate George Will GOP strategist Rick Tyler The Club for Growth Reporters Journalist­s Fake-news media CNN The New York Times The New York Post The New York Daily News Chris Cuomo Megyn Kelly Dana Perino John King Women who accused him of sexual misconduct China Doctors Baseball’s Alex Rodriguez Star Jones

An Ebola patient Anyone who didn’t tune in to GOP debates to watch Trump Accusing others of lying is a bit rich coming from the man who has done more than any other to turn public discourse into a parallel universe of alternativ­e facts. If we were psychoanal­yzing Trump, we might say he is projecting. Of course, if we were psychoanal­yzing Trump, we might throw the entire DSM at him, starting with antisocial personalit­y disorder and working our way through narcissist­ic personalit­y disorder and then paranoid personalit­y disorder.

But Trump’s tendency to accuse others of the flaws he possesses seems to be more than a reflex. It appears to be a strategy — a verbal jujitsu in which he uses his opponents’ strengths against them.

Trump was the old guy in the Republican debates and more than once seemed to fade partway through — but he managed to brand Jeb Bush “low energy.” He did the same to Clinton, portraying her as weak and tired; now he’s keeping an exceedingl­y light schedule as president and passing a good chunk of the time at his private retreats. Trump told the most extravagan­t untruths during the campaign, had the most glaring conflicts of interest and knew the least about governing. But he branded Cruz as “Lyin’ Ted,” Clinton as “Crooked Hillary” and Rubio as a “lightweigh­t” and “Little Marco.”

Trump did not invent this strategy. I first encountere­d it on the playground of the Old Mill Road elementary school on Long Island in the 1970s: “I’m rubber, you’re glue — whatever you say bounces off me and sticks to you.” Other kids used an endlessly entertaini­ng variant: “I know you are but what am I?”

During the campaign, when the topic turned to Trump’s leadership of the “birther” movement questionin­g Obama’s U.S. birth, Trump declared that “Hillary Clinton and her campaign of 2008 started the birther controvers­y.”

When Clinton pointed to the racist “alt-right” movement, Trump responded by saying, “Hillary Clinton is a bigot who sees people of color only as votes, not as human beings worthy of a better future.” When Clinton alleged that Trump was “temperamen­tally unfit” for the presidency, Trump responded by saying it was Clinton who “does not have the temperamen­t to be president.”

On and on it went. Attention to Trump’s thin and vague set of policy proposals led him to say it was Clinton who “never talks about policy.” After a dark GOP convention full of apocalypti­c warnings, Trump claimed that Clinton “is the only one fear-mongering.” Clinton’s charge that Trump is volatile and easily baited, likewise, led him to call her “trigger happy.”

Shortly after Clinton said Islamic State terrorists are “rooting for Donald Trump’s victory,” Trump proclaimed that those very same terrorists “dream all night of having Hillary Clinton” as president. Trump’s answer to questions about self-dealing in his family’s charitable work was to point to “crooked” Clinton’s “criminal” foundation. His routine response, even now, to inquiries into his and his aides’ ties to Russia: They should investigat­e the Clintons’ Russia ties.

We’ve seen this pattern in the early months of the presidency as well — accusing the Democrats of seeking a government shutdown when it was his own late demands that threatened to upend a bipartisan spending bill, and now, when accused of lying by the former FBI director, calling that man a liar.

There’s no doubt Trump’s rubber-and-glue strategy has worked. He is, after all, the president, and Crooked Hillary, Lyin’ Ted, Little Marco and Low-Energy Jeb are not. But can the man who has establishe­d himself as one of history’s most prodigious prevaricat­ors convince the country that the former FBI director, celebrated for his integrity, is just another lying liar? Polls before and after Comey’s testimony suggest Trump is losing that contest.

After all, who are you going to believe? Trump? Or everybody else?

 ??  ?? Dana Milbank
Dana Milbank

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