USA TODAY International Edition

All Trump scandals are above average

The immigrant children crisis dwarfs Katrina

- Jill Lawrence Jill Lawrence is commentary editor of USA TODAY and author of “The Art of the Political Deal: How Congress Beat the Odds and Broke Through Gridlock.”

President Donald Trump is an overachiev­er. Seriously.

The ethics abuses and conflicts of interest in his administra­tion are unpreceden­ted. The Russia investigat­ion, with Trump’s accompanyi­ng attacks on the news media and the Justice Department, is far more serious than Watergate. And the border orphans crisis is not Trump’s “Katrina moment.” It’s much worse because this is not only a tragedy, it’s one that the president created for political reasons.

Separating children from parents was supposed to be a deterrent, but people crossing the border didn’t know their kids would be taken. It was supposed to be a hallmark of a harsh zero tolerance policy, but judges typically slapped people with time served and a $10 ticket. It was supposed to strengthen Trump’s hand with Congress (yes, a bargaining chip) until pressure forced him not only to cave, but to also urge no action at all on immigratio­n.

And although family separation was — briefly — a pillar of administra­tion policy, justified with Scripture no less, the government had no system in place to reunite families. Not even a simple system of bracelets to identify children and parents.

That is unfathomab­le. How did Trump and his team think U.S. parents would react? Probably the way Brian Kilmeade on Fox & Friends did — it’s not like he’s doing this to kids in Idaho or Texas. But they were wrong. Most parents seem to be feeling vicarious panic and dread, and most Americans oppose the policy.

Even if you’ve never lost sight of your child for a minute at a mall, it’s all too easy to imagine this. And then to read that some families might never be reunited? That Americans could end up adopting some of these children? Imagine that happening to you and your child, happening to any parents and children from anywhere on earth. And then imagine your country did that. On purpose.

This is the administra­tion that having thrown our immigratio­n system, our alliances, our internatio­nal trade and our foreign policy into chaos now wants to reorganize the U.S. government. First on the list, combine the department­s of Labor and Education. Raise your hand if you trust Trump or anyone on his team with that project. It’ll never get anywhere, because Congress has never warmed to this kind of thing. Still, the audacity — the idea that they think they are competent enough to remake government — is stunning.

Amid all the tragedy there is black comedy:

Trump adviser Stephen Miller and Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, key figures in the administra­tion’s immigratio­n policy, hounded by protesters as each tries to dine out at, wait for it, Mexican restaurant­s in Washington.

First lady Melania Trump’s “I really don’t care, do u?” jacket worn on a trip meant to show she cares about immigrant children ripped from their parents. Trump’s cavalier treatment of his fellow Republican­s in Congress, who have been struggling for days toward an immigratio­n reform compromise.

“Republican­s should stop wasting their time on Immigratio­n,” he tweeted, until after the “Red Wave” pads their House and Senate majorities this fall (he and Newt Gingrich might be the only political figures in America who are expecting that wave).

Trump is treating his GOP allies as if they’re Canada and Mexico: like garbage. They can’t even trust him to accurately describe a meeting scores of them attended and saw with their own eyes. He said they “applauded and laughed loudly” when he insulted their colleague Mark Sanford, who lost his primary race this month to a Trump pick. They didn’t; they grumbled and booed and said he was way out of line.

The next day, the president abruptly canceled the traditiona­l congressio­nal picnic on White House grounds. “It didn’t feel exactly right to me,” he said. “We’ll make it another time when things are going extremely well.”

Good luck with that.

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