In Trump Nation, healing is overrated
With unity a no-show at this inauguration, only time will tell if the wounds can close
“In Defeat: Defiance. In Victory: Magnanimity.” — Winston Churchill
“Happy New Year to all, including to my many enemies and those who have fought me and lost so badly they just don’t know what to do.” — Donald Trump
At inauguration time, magnanimity usually prevails. Winners reach out to losers, and a honey- moon ensues. But many Trump supporters say there’s little this president-elect can, should, or probably will do to mollify Hillary Clinton supporters.
Erwin Jackson, a landlord in Tallahassee, says political healing is overrated anyway: “I’m not worried about people who are disappointed. I’m excited. The Democrats are in denial. Healing is something they’re gonna have to work out on their own.”
Pat Acciavatti, a retired excavating company owner in St. Clair Township, Mich., agrees: “When Obama won, and when Bill Clinton won, I just shut up, hung my head and took my medicine. I wasn’t protesting in the street.’’
Both are members of Trump Nation, an array of Trump voters in all 50 states who have spoken with the USA TODAY Network.
Although Trump inherits a more divided country than any recent predecessor, he seems less interested than any in making nice. And that’s OK with Trump Nation, which generally believes there are only two remedies to the post-election divide.
One is time. “It heals all wounds,” says Barry Fixler, a Bardonia, N.Y., jewelry store owner who opened his own local Trump headquarters last year. But, he predicts, “it’ll take the Democrats years to come around.”
The other is for Trump to do
what he said he’ll do — like bring back jobs, secure the southern border and generally make America great again.
“That’s going to promote more positive interactions between the two camps,” says Rachel Quade, a real estate agent and Republican activist who lives outside Indianapolis. “It’s hard to stay angry when there’s good news.”
Presidents always come into office with an agenda and a mandate. As Barack Obama famously told Republican congressional leaders eight years ago, “Elections have consequences, and at the end of the day, I won.”
But winning candidates usually make at least a show of bipartisanship.
In 2000, after Al Gore conceded the presidency, George W. Bush made a nationally televised speech from the chamber of the Texas House of Representatives. “Here, in a place where Democrats have the majority, Republicans and Democrats have worked together,” he said. “The spirit of cooperation I have seen in this hall is what’s needed in Washington.’’
In 2009, Obama attended a dinner honoring John McCain, the GOP nominee, on the night before the inauguration, and he spoke warmly of McCain at a luncheon after the inauguration.
Since Trump has the lowest approval rating of any recent in- coming president, it would seem logical for him to try to mend fences.
At times he has. He spoke graciously of Clinton after she conceded defeat and declared “it’s time for America to bind the wounds of division.” In a Today show interview last month, he promised, “We’re going to have a country that’s very well-healed.”
But for the most part — especially on Twitter, and unlike any recent president-elect — he has stayed in campaign mode.
He has lashed out at Bill Clinton, the cast of Hamilton, Alec Baldwin and Saturday Night
Live, and Ohio Gov. John Kasich. He has called Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer a “clown.” Since praising Hillary Clinton, he has dismissed her as weak and clueless.
Some Trump supporters say their leader is no less bipartisan than any other victorious presidential candidate — especially Obama. Upon taking office, Jackson says, “he went off so far, so fast to the left. He passed Obamacare with no Republican support.”
Others would just as soon Trump hit Democrats with an olive branch as offer them one. His nine-state post-election victory tour was marked by cries, familiar from the campaign against Clinton, of “Lock her up!”
When Trump supporters encounter these political divisions in their own lives, however, they tend to deal with them more sensitively.
Fixler says he gets along with his Clinton-voter daughter by not talking politics. Jackson keeps the peace with his motherin-law by agreeing to disagree. Lora Hubbel of Vermillion, S.D., jokingly told her daughter she didn’t want to know how she voted, because if she knew she’d voted for Clinton, she’d have to rewrite her will.
So campaign passions remain hot. Although Gene Dunn calls for finding common ground, he also says Trump, immediately after taking office, should sit at a table on the Capitol podium and revoke the Affordable Care Act and some executive orders.
His rationale: “Obama openly mocked Trump and his candidacy. What better way for Trump to exact political revenge than to unexpectedly humiliate him in front of the world with billions watching on TV?”
Healing may be a long time coming.
“I’m not worried about people who are disappointed. ... Healing is something they’re gonna have to work out on their own.” Erwin Jackson, Tallahassee, who voted for Trump