Baltimore Sun

America’s angry presidents

In dispositio­n, Donald Trump ranks alongside Richard Nixon and Andrew Johnson

- By David O. Stewart

Lost amid the current fuss over presidenti­al impeachmen­t is one strong resemblanc­e Donald Trump bears to two predecesso­rs who landed in impeachmen­t proceeding­s, Andrew Johnson and Richard Nixon. Anger and grievance fueled the politics of all three.

Other presidents have lost their tempers, but most have kept their anger offstage, presenting to the public a sunny face and upbeat message. Most sought to appear calm (Calvin Coolidge, “NoDrama” Obama), or even affable (Gerald Ford, Ronald Reagan).

Not, however, Johnson, Nixon, and now Mr. Trump. Ill humor, routinely displayed, framed their public images. For the first two, at least, that approach ended badly.

Andrew Johnson’s sour dispositio­n grew from an impoverish­ed boyhood that did not include a day of school. He radiated resentment. “If Andy Johnson was a snake,” a contempora­ry remarked, “he would hide in the grass and bite the heels of rich men’s children.”

A fellow Tennesseea­n, President James K. Polk, described Johnson as “vindictive and perverse,” while his bodyguard called him “the best hater I ever knew.”

Succeeding the assassinat­ed Abraham Lincoln, Johnson blocked protection­s for freed slaves. He denounced opponents as traitors and accused them of inciting his murder: “When I am beheaded,” he railed, “I want the American people to be the witness,” with his blood “poured out as a fit libation to the Union.”

His sense of grievance was overpoweri­ng. “I have been traduced,” he proclaimed. “I have been slandered. I have been maligned.” He vowed not “to be bullied by enemies.”

Those enemies struck back. A one-term president, Johnson holds the record for vetoes overridden by Congress (15). The House overwhelmi­ngly impeached him in 1868, then the Senate came within one vote of removing him from office.

Nixon, another poor boy, also made anger central to his politics. “People react to fear,” he told an adviser, “not love.”

Nixon used coded appeals to white racial fears. He applauded “hard hat” rioters who beat up antiwar protestors. He promised vengeance on those he resented, often the press and Kennedy family members.

Nixon’s scowl became his trademark. He needed no sympathy; his own self-pity overflowed. Conceding the California governor’s race in 1962, he pronounced, “You don’t have Nixon to kick around anymore.”

Finally, Nixon’s wrath drove him to launch the “third-rate burglary” at the Watergate Hotel that led to his 1974 resignatio­n under threat of impeachmen­t.

Mr. Trump’s stormy dispositio­n turns his rallies into festivals of spleen, mockery and insults. He has boasted, “When someone attacks me, I always attack back … except 100x more.” That vindictive­ness, he explained, is “a way of life.”

As president, he deploys demeaning nicknames — Crooked Hillary, of course, plus Lying James Comey, Head Clown Chuck Schumer and Low-IQ Maxine Waters.

His tweets spray ill will. He called his secretary of state “dumb as a rock” and “lazy as hell.” He dismissed his attorney general as “scared stiff and Missing in Action.” Four-star General Stanley McChrystal was “known for big, dumb mouth.”

Foreign adversarie­s receive similar treatment. Mr. Trump’s rage at Iran’s president promised, in all caps on Twitter: “YOU WILL SUFFER CONSEQUENC­ES THE LIKES OF WHICH FEW THROUGHOUT HISTORY HAVE EVER SUFFERED BEFORE.” Kim Jong Un of North Korea was “obviously a madman.” When French President Emmanuel Macron urged higher defense spending, Mr. Trump harked back to the two world wars: “How did that work out for France? They were starting to learn German in Paris before the U.S. came along.”

Mr. Trump’s 2019 Christmas message was a haiku to rancor: “It’s a disgrace what’s happening in this country, but other than that, I wish everybody a Merry Christmas.”

The presidenti­al dispositio­n matters, seeping into the national mood. Good cheer is infectious. An observer famously dismissed Franklin Roosevelt’s “secondclas­s intellect,” but praised the jaunty New Yorker’s “first-class temperamen­t.”

History does not always repeat itself. Today’s angry presidency need not land in the ditch. Yet a public persona steeped in malice implies a paranoia that may misinterpr­et events, plus instabilit­y and even caprice — all dangerous qualities for someone with great power.

 ?? AFP CONTRIBUTO­R#AFP/ ?? U.S. President Donald Trump regularly turns to Twitter to spew vitriol.
AFP CONTRIBUTO­R#AFP/ U.S. President Donald Trump regularly turns to Twitter to spew vitriol.

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