The Sentinel-Record

Trump’s tabloid talents unsuited to the office

- Micheal Gerson

WASHINGTON — Here is a question at the crossroads of psychology and political philosophy: How can a leader so enamored by authoritar­ianism be so allergic to order?

Donald Trump rose to prominence on the promise of a firm hand. “When the students poured into Tiananmen Square,” he once said, “the Chinese government almost blew it. Then they were vicious, they were horrible, but they put it down with strength. That shows you the power of strength.” At another point: “I think (Vladimir) Putin’s been a very strong leader for Russia, he’s been a lot stronger than our leader (President Obama), that I can tell you.” And recently about China’s Xi Jinping: “He’s now president for life. … Maybe we’ll have to give that a shot someday.”

But for all this, Trump seems utterly incapable of ruling even the 18-acre kingdom of the White

House. Recent reports describe “chaos,” “tumult,”

“disarray” and “pure madness.” With the policy process completely broken, staffers seem to occupy their time with blood feuds, leaking and legal consultati­ons. Trump himself — “brooding,” “isolated and angry,” “mad as hell” — takes it out on Jeff Sessions and Alec Baldwin.

The president’s self-generated governing crisis is disturbing. But when paired with authoritar­ian envy, it is pathetic. An exercise in autocratic jock-sniffing. Other would-be strongmen have turned to Karl Marx for inspiratio­n; for Trump, it is more like the Marx Brothers. Absurdly stereotype­d characters — Anthony Scaramucci, Sebastian Gorka, Stephen Bannon — pop randomly in and out of well-appointed rooms, while the main character feeds chaos all around him. It is the Duck Soup dictatorsh­ip.

Don’t get me wrong. Trump’s attempts to delegitimi­ze institutio­ns that check his power — the FBI, the mainstream media — are doing lasting damage. His constant lies have unleashed the irrational in American public life. His reliance on conspiracy theories and Fox News (but I repeat myself) to solidify a core of unthinking allegiance is dangerous. It is sobering to see how a revolt against authority has been channeled into a movement of docility and submission. If Trump did not have blind support, he would have no support at all.

But this is something different from authoritar­ianism. Trump approaches governing like a spectator, often acting as if someone else is really in charge. He seems most comfortabl­e commenting from the sidelines, like an old Fox viewer yelling at the television. Trump doesn’t know how to do the actual job of president, and doesn’t seem aware that he doesn’t know. And few people around him know any better.

Sometimes the simplest explanatio­ns are best. As Groucho Marx said: “He may talk like an idiot and look like an idiot. But don’t let that fool you. He really is an idiot.”

Being president, it turns out, actually requires certain skills. Presidents gain influence through rhetorical leadership — with the tools of inspiratio­n. They gain influence through policy innovation and legislativ­e leadership. They gain influence through motivating the permanent bureaucrac­y to accept and pursue their agenda.

As a matter of rhetoric, Trump will be remembered for an endless string of demeaning and incoherent tweets that force us to question his stability. As a matter of policy, he has either deferred to congressio­nal priorities or acted through executive orders that can be easily undone. Rather than leading the bureaucrac­y he has alienated it, depopulate­d it and sent some of it into resistance.

And it is worse than this. From his first executive order on migration from Muslim-majority countries to his recent action on tariffs, Trump and his administra­tion have not displayed even minimal proficienc­y in making and explaining presidenti­al decisions. On issues from immigratio­n to gun control, the president has made seemingly random and contradict­ory interventi­ons that reveal his ignorance about the basics of important policy debates. The man who believes in “the power of strength” exhibits a level of competence that would be embarrassi­ng in high school student government.

Trump’s governing approach (at least so far) is less authoritar­ian than transgress­ive. He views the presidency as a performanc­e. And he has shown a remarkable knack for dominating the national conversati­on with the outrageous and trivial. But we are seeing that the skill set of a reality TV star — the cultivatio­n of melodrama and feuds — has almost no overlap with the skill set of a successful president. We might as well imagine Franklin D. Roosevelt on “Keeping Up with the Kardashian­s.” Trump’s particular talents are better suited to Page Six of The New York Post than to the history books.

The problem is this: Though weakness and incompeten­ce are preferable to authoritar­ianism, they are unequal to the real challenges of the nation.

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