Daily Dispatch

Mr Fix-it in a right royal fix

First six months doesn’t bode well for him

-

DONALD Trump’s first six months in the White House have been a riot of scandal, chaos and outrage that – absent a major course correction – could spell doom for his entire administra­tion.

All US presidents face crises that seem to sweep the White House from its moorings.

Abraham Lincoln struggled through a bloody Civil War. Bill Clinton was humiliated by muck-raking investigat­ions. Barack Obama took five months to plug a devastatin­g oil spill and even longer to right the economy.

But few presidents have caused such outrage or faced such a multitude of crises as Donald Trump has in his first six months.

“To be consumed by scandal from day one is not good, no major legislatio­n is not good, to have approval ratings that are so low and the potential for Republican defections, all of this is not what you expect,” said Julian Zelizer, a professor of history at Princeton University.

Trump swaggered into office on January 20 declaring Washington was broke and only a killer businessma­n such as himself could fix it. That promise looks increasing­ly threadbare.

The White House remains understaff­ed, under-skilled and struggling to attract new talent.

Trump’s political agenda has been blown to smithereen­s: The border “wall” has not been built, Nafta has not been torn up, the Iran deal is still in place and Obamacare remains the law of the land.

Even with Republican­s in control of both houses of Congress, the influentia­l and nominally supportive Drudge Report declared this the “most unproducti­ve congress in 164 years”. Oratorical­ly, Trump has continued where his campaign left off, picking fights with the press, judges, his own party, Democrats and FBI director James Comey, whom he fired.

All the while, a drip, drip of evidence has amplified allegation­s that his family and aides sought help from Russia to tip the election against Hillary Clinton.

There have been bright spots. The Islamic State group has been virtually defeated in Mosul and in Raqa, the capital of the so-called caliphate, is besieged. Trump has fulfilled his promise to scrap a trans-pacific trade deal, and successful­ly appointed conservati­ve judge Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court.

But Trump wins have been few and far between.

However, presidents can and do right the course. Bill Clinton’s first term was notoriousl­y difficult and like Trump he suffered an early and embarrassi­ng legislativ­e defeat on healthcare.

“History is full of examples of presidents who learn from their mistakes and go on to have major legislativ­e successes,” said Alex Conant, a Republican strategist at Firehouse Strategies who served in George W Bush’s administra­tion.

“Presidents are ultimately judged on what they get done and he’s only six months in. He could still end up being a highly successful president.”

But changes would be needed, Conant admits. Even Republican­s have criticised Trump’s recent failed efforts to push his own healthcare reforms over the line.

Trump’s character could equally prove his administra­tion’s worst enemy. If nothing changes, Trump’s approval ratings – already historical­ly low at 40% – could portend a shellackin­g in the 2018 midterm elections. — AFP

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? IN CRISIS: From left, US Vice-President Mike Pence, US President Donald Trump and National Security Adviser H R McMaster at the White House yesterday
Picture: AFP IN CRISIS: From left, US Vice-President Mike Pence, US President Donald Trump and National Security Adviser H R McMaster at the White House yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa