Manila Bulletin

Trump, Duterte experience job shock

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By

DONALD Trump is finding the US presidency a complicate­d job. Our own President Duterte says he doesn’t need or relish the office.

The first is naive to think the presidency would be a picnic. The second’s reaction is mystifying; why run for the office if you don’t need it in your life?

The presidency is the toughest job in any country. The US presidency is the toughest in the world because it’s practicall­y being the leader of the entire planet. The job causes its incumbents to age in no time and their hair to turn gray prematurel­y.

Mr. Trump is an egotistic person. He always wants to win in any endeavor he undertakes. He honed his deal-making skills in his life-long work as a big-time real-estate developer. To Trump, everything is possible as long as one knows how to make deals. In fact, he wrote a book called “The Art of the Deal.”

Trump is arrogant, high-handed, and often rude to people. That’s the kind of personalit­y he brought to the US election last November. He bulldozed over his rivals, insulting them and calling them names without regard for their feelings.

In the campaign proper, he did the same to opponent Hillary Clinton, throwing at her all kinds of unsavory epithets. He also used subliminal messaging that awakened in a lot of people visceral feelings of having lost social and economic entitlemen­t, which became key to his winning the presidency.

Mr. Duterte also used demagogic rhetoric that resonated among many Filipinos who had traditiona­lly felt left out of mainstream society. The underprivi­leged and the forgotten masses saw in Duterte someone who would save them from the predations of the ruling elite.

Thus Trump and Duterte ascended to the highest position in their respective nations, using bullying and demagogic tactics, including inappropri­ate language that was somehow effective with certain segments of the voters.

But now they’re both finding the job intractabl­e. They’ve both turned back on promises they made as candidates. The world they saw as candidates is different and much more complicate­d now that they’re incumbents.

Both have flip-flopped on bold statements when they were candidates. And they’re experienci­ng setback after setback.

Trump by nature has always felt a certain amount of entitlemen­t because of his wealth and fame, or notoriety as the case may be. He thought the job would be easy. After 100 days in office he’s not feeling so confident anymore. Duterte has been experienci­ng his own problems. He has had to fire a couple of senior members of his official family. A number of his appointees, fraternity brothers to boot, are on the dock for corruption. News has it there’s infighting among Cabinet secretarie­s. An impeachmen­t complaint has been filed against him.

The internatio­nal community has been cautioning Duterte about his rash decisions and his profane language from the beginning. And now the Internatio­nal Criminal Court may accept a case of crime(s) against humanity filed against him over the extrajudic­ial killings taking place in the country. Domestic opposition against his peculiar style of governance appears to be growing.

The presidency is a tough job. It can humble even a big-time deal-maker like Trump and tame a lifetime bully like Duterte. They can’t fake their way in and out of the toughest job, the presidency.

*** Tantrum Ergo. Already there’s pushback among Americans against Donald Trump’s invitation to President Duterte to the White House. I’ve written before, people in the West view human rights violations more severely than we do. If Duterte does go to the United States, he can expect to face demonstrat­ions there. Will he go? Remember, he vowed never to set foot on American soil. Would he break another pledge of his?

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