The Manila Times

Stagecraft won’t win shutdown battle for Trump

- WASHINGTON, D.C.: AP

Military salutes. Heaps of contraband. Oval Office optics.

President Donald Trump, who has long put a premium on stagecraft, is discoverin­g he cannot resolve the partial government shutdown simply by putting on a show.

With the standoff over paying for his long-promised US-Mexico wall dragging on, the president’s Oval Office address and visit to the Texas border this past week failed to break the logjam. Aides and allies are fearful that he has misjudged Democratic resolve and is running out of negotiatin­g options.

Using the trappings of the White House to make a point is a standard procedure. Dramatic public displays have been Trump’s negotiatin­g go-to. But even Trump was skeptical that the speech and trip would make a difference.

Some in the White House argue that Trump’s moves helped push his message. But many associates fear his hand is weakening as his efforts to define the stakes must compete with the testimonia­ls of hardship from federal workers and people in need of shuttered government services. That may leave a national emergency declaratio­n as Trump’s only escape path — one more showy strategy that could backfire.

Trump defended his approach Saturday, telling critics on Twitter that “there’s almost nobody in the W. H. but me, and I do have a plan on the Shutdown.” During a telephone interview with a Fox News Channel host later that night, Trump insisted that he hadn’t “left the White House in months” and he called on Democrats to come to the table. The Texas trip was two days earlier.

Former Trump campaign aide Sam Nunberg said Trump was simply using all available tools. Nunberg argued that Trump’s border visit, which included an interview on the president’s preferred network, Fox News, was “not going to win any hearts and minds.” But he added that the Oval Office address was a “great opportunit­y” for Trump to make his case to an audience of millions well beyond his most loyal supporters.

In a moment of deep political divisions, though, the presidenti­al megaphone does not seem to hold the power it once did.

Democratic leaders have dismissed Trump’s tactics. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (Democrat, California) last week decried the “soap opera that the president’s petulance and obstinance is creating.”

Trump’s visit to McAllen, Texas was staged for maximum impact.

At a border patrol facility, he surveyed mounds of drugs and weapons seized by agents. He hugged tearful families who spoke of relatives killed by those in the United States illegally. He traveled to a dusty bluff above the Rio Grande and saluted a border patrol helicopter as it flew past.

The stop was intended to reinforce Trump’s claims of chaos and crisis at the border, but it was notable for what was left out. The contraband was designed to emphasize the dangers of an unsecured border. But there was only passing mention that the drugs were intercepte­d at official points of entry, not in open areas where Trump wants to build a wall. Trump did meet with victims and agents, but he did not go to a nearby facility where hundreds of the migrant children were detained in cages after being separated from their parents last year.

Allies say Trump has dug in for good reason: building a wall has always been a sure- fire applause line for Trump. Some, however, believe it has become a political albatross.

Trump promised the wall during his campaign as part of his immigratio­n platform. At his rallies, he encouraged supporters to chant “Build the wall! Build the wall!” and he pledged that Mexico would pay for it.

Since coming to the White House, he has failed to get Mexico to pay for the wall and has struggled to advance his immigratio­n policies in Congress, even when Republican­s were in full control of both chambers. With Democrats now in the majority in the House, his leverage has dwindled.

Increasing­ly, many around Trump think that the only way out of the shutdown impasse is for the president to declare a national emergency to try and pay for the wall by diverting federal funds from other programs. They reason that such a declaratio­n would wind up in court, but Trump could reopen government in the meantime and say he was continuing the fight for the wall during the legal fight. It’s a play that would be in keeping with Trump’s pattern of claiming victory even when the circumstan­ces are murky.

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