Gulf Today

Trump’s confidence appears to be wobbling

- John T Bennett,

Which president is seeking re-election? The Donald, political streefight­er-in-chief? Or Low-energy Don? It can be hard to tell lately.

Is it the Donald Trump who last Friday roared allegation­s and insults at his Democratic rivals during a mini-campaign rally at a Florida airport, which also is the one who on Thursday morning claimed Democrats aim to outlaw “all kinds of animals” and pressured his top law enforcemen­t officials to help him win re-election?

Or is it the one who spoke for over a half hour on Wednesday evening in a flat monotone while making misleading statement ater misleading statement, which also is the one who appeared unprepared and even unwilling to issue a forceful response to sharp criticisms of his presidency uttered just hours earlier by his Democratic general election foes?

The president’s re-election campaign has become as up and down as it is void of many new ideas to help voters or rebuild the economy once — or if — the country moves beyond the coronaviru­s pandemic ater election day.

One day, Trump is making bold — and possibly unconstitu­tional — claims about undoing Congress’ will on tax policy in a second term.

“At the end of the year, on the assumption that I win, I’m going to terminate the payroll tax, which is another thing that some of the great economists would like to see done,” he said on Wednesday evening. “We’ll be paying into social security through the General Fund. And it works out very nicely.”

(Only other economists and both Democrats and Republican­s on Capitol Hill say it would not.)

The next, he is back to doing something The Donald typically avoids: publicly suggesting all that “winning” he promised back in 2016 could come to a sudden end on 3 November.

“If I win the election, I will have a deal with Iran within 30 days,” he said about 14 hours later in the Oval Office in announcing a peace agreement between Israel and the United Arab Emirates. To be sure, gone is the swashbuckl­ing commander in chief who issued daily screeds about crushing Joe Biden in the fall — perhaps even in a landslide decision.

Trump practicall­y oozes a lack of confidence these days, and appears fully aware of his rancid poll numbers and the uphill climb he faces to win a second term. “And yet, they’re highly thought of. But nobody likes me,” he said earlier this month, bemoaning the high approval ratings for White House coronaviru­s task force members Anthony Fauci and Deborah Birx. His rather depressing and self-loathing conclusion why: “It can only be my personalit­y.”

This is a president who has completely lost his “I am the ‘Chosen One’” swagger.

Still, one should expect the race to tighten ater both parties hold their nominating convention­s over the next two weeks. But no credible political prognostic­ator believes the president is not in trouble, largely because the race with Biden is a dead heat in places he won rather easily in 2016, namely Florida, Ohio, Texas, Georgia and North Carolina. One minute, Trump appears to have almost nothing let in the tank. The next, he’s back to his old rhetorical bombthrowi­ng self. There is no beter example of his hot-and-cold running re-election strategy than his message about Kamala Harris joining the Democratic ticket.

A few weeks ago, he said she would have been a “fine choice.”

This week, he has called her an “unusual pick” and a “nasty” woman who was meaner to nowSupreme Court Justice Bret Kavanaugh than any other Senate Judiciary Commitee member during his confirmati­on hearings.

But the president was unable to forcefully respond to her harsh criticisms of his handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic during his Wednesday evening briefing. Based on his sharp words for other political rivals, it felt like he was not even trying that hard to do so. “The president’s mismanagem­ent of the pandemic has plunged us into the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression,” Harris said at an event a few hours earlier when she was formally introduced by Biden. She claimed the country is “crying out for leadership” because Trump is not that interested in playing that role.

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