The Record (Troy, NY)

After Trump’s dud, it’s up to Senate GOP

- E.J. Dionne’s email address is ejdionne@washpost.com. Twitter: @EJDionne.

President Trump’s “big, beautiful wall” was never a serious policy proposal. It was a symbol to reassure his supporters that he would keep the sorts of people they don’t like out of the country. It was also a memory device designed by his advisers to remind Trump to talk about immigratio­n in every 2016 campaign speech. But since Trump has absolutely no interest in policy, it is appropriat­e that he has shut down part of our government to defend a piece of rhetoric.

He didn’t even intend to do this. Late last year, he signaled to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) that he’d sign a bill to keep the government open, and McConnell dutifully got it through the Senate unanimousl­y.

Trump closed a quarter of the government (“I will take the man- tle of shutting it down,” he said in December) only after rightwing commentato­rs told him they would be very mad if he relented on The Wall. Thus did a chief executive who likes us to think he’s strong cower before a few ideologues who have only microphone­s and pixels as their weapons.

This is the context of the useless, genuinely stupid fight we are in. It’s why the president’s speech to the nation on Tuesday night was so empty, so unpersuasi­ve to anyone but the already committed.

Trump now loves this shutdown because it does four things for him:

It makes him the center of attention.

It tells members of his base that he is willing to stand up for the idol they adore.

It pushes aside inconvenie­nt news — about the Russia probe, about the administra­tion’s flipping and flopping on Syria, about the many administra­tion posts that are empty.

And it creates the appearance that he is doing something when, in fact, he is doing nothing at all, except keeping large numbers of federal employees from carrying on and earning a living.

Trump’s phony “crisis” talk means he may have to call his own bluff. This is why there is a good chance he will invoke emergency powers to force the military to build the wall. The move would perfectly sum up his approach to government: It would look dramatic and “strong,” it would waste federal funds for self-aggrandizi­ng reasons, and it would be an abuse of his authority, since the “emergency” in question is not an emergency at all.

The only intelligib­le rationale behind Trump’s shutdown is Richard Nixon’s old “madman theory.” The idea is that if one party to a negotiatio­n behaves in a particular­ly crazy and dangerous way, the more reasonable people at the table will give in simply to end the lunacy and avoid catastroph­e.

Already, sane voices are proffering compromise­s — for example, to give Trump some wall money in exchange for protecting the “dreamers,” undocument­ed immigrants brought to the United States by their parents when they were young.

The problem is that Trump has repeatedly rejected deals on the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. And the same anti-immigrant voices who pushed Trump to shutter the government have put him on notice that they would see concession­s of this sort as a sellout.

Right-wing commentato­r Ann Coulter tweetedher spleen Sunday by referring to Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law thought to be interested in a deal, and Neville Chamberlai­n, the British prime minister famous for appeasing Hitler: “If Kushner (Trump) trades amnesty for a wall, history books will have to be pulled from the shelves to replace ‘Neville Chamberlai­n’ with ‘Donald Trump.’ “

Trump is willing to keep hundreds of thousands of government workers idle and unpaid. He lacks the guts to stand up to Coulter and her allies.

Which means that the only path forward is for sensible souls to pressure McConnell and other Senate Republican­s to stop enabling the blusterer in chief and put bills on Trump’s desk to reopen the government. Already, at least three Republican senators (with others titling that way) have said it’s time to do this. More should join them.

On Fox News after Trump’s speech, Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) warned that if Republican­s “undercut the president, that’s the end of his presidency and the end of our party.”

Graham was at best half-right. Yes, Republican­s might humiliate Trump by forcing him to acknowledg­e that this whole business is a fool’s errand. But in doing so, they would be taking a step toward rehabilita­ting a party that has regularly abetted the depredatio­ns of a man who cares only about the spotlight and a totem he claimed Mexico, not American taxpayers, would finance.

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 ??  ?? EJ Dionne Columnist
EJ Dionne Columnist

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