USA TODAY International Edition

Washington bends to Trump’s norm

President has not adjusted to the office, but changed it to suit him

- Susan Page

In the year since his election, Donald Trump has changed Washington more than Washington has changed him.

With that, the nation’s 45th president has upended yet another norm — in this case, the assumption that moving into the White House will have a sobering impact on a newly elected commander in chief. Facing awesome responsibi­lities and the sudden responsibi­lity for governing, a new president typically moves to moderate his rhetoric and reach out to old foes, at least for a while. They adjust campaign promises to acknowledg­e political realities and competing power centers.

Not this time.

Instead, Trump continues to be the unpredicta­ble bludgeon familiar from the 2016 campaign. He has forced Washington to adjust to him — accelerati­ng the pace, raising the temperatur­e and widening the fractures in both parties. In short: louder, faster, fiercer.

As much as any president in modern times, he has left a distinctiv­e stamp on the capital that is likely to have repercussi­ons after his tenure is over.

“Trump’s successors can draw lessons from his successful and lasting appeal to the white working class, his flamboyant verbal disparagem­ent of establishm­ent Washington, his attempt to diminish a hostile mainstream media and his strong use of executive powers,” says Steven Schier, co-author of The Trump Presidency: An Outsider in the Oval Office. “All this has converted the presidency into an engine of battle. Future presidents will no doubt fire up that engine for their own purposes.”

An alternate universe?

Trump has intensifie­d and magnified these trends. Partisansh­ip has been hardening for decades, and President Obama expanded the use of executive action when he wasn’t able to push legislatio­n through Congress. Trust in the news media and the government was eroding well before Trump began attacking those institutio­ns on Twitter.

In an alternate universe in which Hillary Clinton managed to win the White House last year, it’s hard to imagine there would have been a ceasefire in the era of constant political combat.

Trump has redefined the GOP in his image — no longer the party of free trade, global leadership and deficit reduction but of “America First” and cultural warfare. In a book out next week former president George W. Bush told Mark Updegrove, “I’m worried that I will be the last Republican president.”

And Trump has attacked the mainstream media as “fake news” and “enemies of the American people,” casting the reporters as adversarie­s in a way not seen since Richard Nixon.

The elevated tension level is particular­ly remarkable at a time that the economy is strong. There are challenges in North Korea and elsewhere but no foreign-policy crisis. One party controls the White House, the House and Senate, traditiona­lly an emollient for action.

Yet for those who work in government and politics from both parties, Washington has been in what amounts to an uninterrup­ted and exhausting state of high alert since Election Day.

Trump mentioned Wednesday’s oneyear anniversar­y at a rally with U.S. troops in Japan on Sunday.

“There was a rhythm to Washington,” with times of controvers­y followed by periods of relative calm, recalls William Galston, who arrived in town 35 years ago to work on Walter Mondale’s presidenti­al campaign. “Now it’s like sensory overload. … It’s like every six hours, a new front is opened on a constantly expanding war.”

The sense of uncertaint­y and peril has been fueled by investigat­ions into allegation­s that members of Team Trump may have colluded with Russian meddling in the election, which the president denies. The first indictment­s and plea deal announced last week by special counsel Robert Mueller signaled the opening of a new and potentiall­y explosive chapter on that scandal.

Turbulence as a tactic

For Trump, turbulence is a tactic and disruption a selling point.

“I think the American people elected somebody who’s tough, who’s smart and who’s a fighter,” White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said in a defense of his leadership style. “And that’s Donald Trump.”

Indeed, President Trump is a lot like Candidate Trump: A combative puncher and counterpun­cher who won’t or can’t back away from a fight or an insult. A master of social media who has deployed what amounts to a provocativ­e personal broadcasti­ng system.

“I’ve never seen a man less changed by the customs and responsibi­lities of the presidency,” says Galston, a White House policy adviser for President Clinton who is at the Brookings Institutio­n.

Trump declines to accommodat­e to the standard practices of his modern predecesso­rs, including his refusal to release his tax returns. In recent days, he blasted the actions of his own administra­tion, calling the Army’s decision not to imprison Bowe Bergdahl for desertion “a complete and total disgrace” and saying he was “very unhappy” with the Justice Department for not pursuing investigat­ions of Clinton.

This isn’t what the political experts predicted. By now, speculatio­n that Trump is poised to “pivot” to more familiar ground in his politics or persona has proven inaccurate so often that the word has become more of a punchline than a prediction.

Even a disputed election that was settled by a 5-4 decision of the Supreme Court was less unsettling.

“It was hard, but nothing like this,” says Sam Skinner, a former chief of staff in the first Bush administra­tion. What’s more, Trump filed papers to run for a second term on the day he was inaugurate­d to begin his first term. That’s new, too.

“Trump’s out there doing campaign events now,” Skinner marveled. “Who would have heard of that?”

 ?? KAZUHIRO NOGI/AP ?? President Trump greets the press on his trip to Asia.
KAZUHIRO NOGI/AP President Trump greets the press on his trip to Asia.

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