The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Trump’s newfound calm plays to perception that all is well

- Kathleen Parker Columnist

Two distinct realities coexist in the nation’s capital with the approximat­e compatibil­ity of oil and water.

There’s the reality of 4.1 percent economic growth, full employment, a declining trade deficit and some wage growth.

And then there’s Michael Cohen.

While President Trump was focused on his sunny economic report Friday, the media was obsessed with news that the president’s former attorney was prepared to tell special counsel Robert S. Mueller III that Trump knew in advance about the June 2016 campaign meeting between Donald Trump Jr. and Russians who allegedly had dirt on Hillary Clinton.

If true, then Cohen would be contradict­ing prior statements by both Trump men, including Trump Jr.’s testimony before a congressio­nal committee. Whatever the case, the president has engineered an offensive strategy that could soften the effects of Cohen’s news, and most certainly will further fuel Americans’ disgust with journalist­s.

Publicly, he has appeared more statesmanl­ike, less impetuous, more discipline­d, calm and composed. In other words, Trump hasn’t been himself. Distinctly missing this last week was his usual puffed-up scowl; absent was the simmering rage coursing through his carotids. Despite troubling news about Cohen, about hush money paid to a Playboy model during the 2016 campaign that Trump also allegedly knew about despite his denial, and a subpoena calling the Trump Organizati­on’s chief financial officer to testify, Trump seemed oddly at peace. Behind closed doors, he may have been dismemberi­ng insects, but at public events he seemed to have just emerged from hot yoga.

My guess: He has found serenity in gamesmansh­ip and the knowledge that he’s winning. And, he’s quite a good actor — far better than Ronald Reagan, who essentiall­y played himself in every role. When Trump is cool and collected, he’s clearly playing.

Scene One: It’s Wednesday, and Trump is seated next to European Commission President JeanClaude Juncker in the Oval Office for a photo op. The two are about to hash out their difference­s on tariffs. This, and their joint announceme­nt later in the day that they are seeking a trade peace pact, is big news given concerns about a trade war with our allies across the Atlantic.

Scene Two: It’s Friday, and Trump is delivering what can only be called good economic news. But some reporters focused instead on the fact that the news conference was “hastily” called. Others pointed out that wages are still low in some parts of the country, or took pains to cast a negative light on the news.

A few White House officials, including economic adviser Larry Kudlow, joined the president to claim that lowered taxes and deregulati­on had led to increases in employment and wages — and that these increases are sustainabl­e. A reporter might have thought to ask Kudlow how the administra­tion plans to deal with structural wage problems that are really no one’s fault, or the president why he’s paying farmers with taxpayer money to soften the blows of his own tariff policies.

Instead, NBC News’s indefatiga­ble Kristen Welker fired off a series of Cohen-related queries to the retreating backs of Trump and Co. Trump knows that reporters will always opt for salaciousn­ess and the scandal (a circumstan­ce Trump created). His M.O.: Let them squawk, and let the American people see what he has to deal with.

Trump clearly hopes that his audience sees that he’s working to build a robust economy and pursue fair trade deals, while collecting the remains of fallen Americans from North Korea — and that all the news media wants to talk about is some made-up story by some lame, lying lawyer who is threatenin­g to tell the corrupt special counsel about some dumb meeting.

In politics, perception is everything.

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