Walker County Messenger

Cabinet showers ‘dear leader’ with praise

- Gene Lyons Arkansas Times

If you’ve been wondering what “loyalty” means to President Trump, his most recent Cabinet meeting provides an illustrati­on. Hint: It doesn’t necessaril­y include loyalty to the United States of America.

Rather, to the assorted Wall Street billionair­es, politician­s and captains of industry that the president has surrounded himself with, loyalty equates with obsequious, sycophanti­c praise for Trump himself.

The televised spectacle has to be seen to be believed. And the question is: Was it more laughable, or more scary? I confess to being of two minds.

On the comic side, I couldn’t help but think of the “most mighty Emperor of Lilliput, Delight and Terror of the Universe” in Swift’s “Gulliver’s Travels.” To determine which of his courtiers gained preference, the emperor -- every bit of 6 inches tall -- conducted public exhibition­s of “leaping and creeping,” rather like dog agility trials. The winners particular­ly excelled at groveling.

That would be quite a competitio­n in Trump’s Cabinet. In an obviously scripted moment, Vice President Pence set the tone by piously intoning how serving the great man was the honor of his life. He’s really good at piety, Pence. White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus then thanked Trump “for the opportunit­y and blessing that you’ve given us to serve your agenda and the American people.” Around the table it went, each secretary striving to outdo the others in expressing devotion to Trump.

The oleaginous Tom Price may have taken the prize: “What an incredible honor it is to lead the Department of Health and Human Services at this pivotal time under your leadership. I can’t thank you enough for the privileges you’ve given me and the leadership that you’ve shown.”

This isn’t a cabinet, it’s a fan club.

Where did they find such an assemblage of brown-nosers? And why would a confident chief executive want them? Good luck getting anybody at that table to ever tell Trump anything he doesn’t want to believe. Not that he ever listens. Anyway, even with his disapprova­l rating in Gallup’s daily tracking poll at 60 percent (versus 36 percent favorable), Trump positively wallowed in the warm bath of his underlings’ praise. I’ve seen cocker spaniels more resistant to petting. Who’s a good boy? Donald’s a good boy!

The president modestly allowed that only Franklin Delano Roosevelt had accomplish­ed as much during his first months in office. Nobody laughed. Thankfully, I suppose, only Defense Secretary Gen. James Mattis resisted the urge to flatter the president. Instead, he spoke highly of serving “men and women of the Department of Defense,” as well he should. I actually believe it’s the patriotic duty of Mattis and beleaguere­d national security adviser Gen. H.R. McMaster to remain on duty almost regardless of the president’s follies. Somebody’s got to man the watch. Because on the scary side, you’d have to go somewhere like North Korea or, yes, Russia to find contempora­ry examples of the “Dear Leader” school of political leadership. That said, if Vladimir Putin appears to be Trump’s role model, there’s no reason to think the cunning Russian dictator is anywhere near as susceptibl­e to flattery as our man-child president.

Nor as vulnerable, ultimately, to public opinion. In Russia, anybody as dangerous to Putin as Gen. Michael Flynn appears to be to President Trump would already be dead. A figure like former FBI Director James Comey would be in prison or exile. He’d be well-advised to avoid high balconies and open windows. But this ain’t Russia. Trump’s feckless attempts to co-opt, then fire Comey -- a cagey, experience­d political infighter -track almost exactly with Flynn’s legal perils. He first sought the FBI director’s personal loyalty one day after then-Acting Attorney General Sally Yates warned the White House that Kremlin operatives had compromise­d Flynn. Trump then asked Comey to lay off Flynn the

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