Chattanooga Times Free Press

TRUMP IS NOT INVINCIBLE

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In the folk wisdom of recent American politics, Donald Trump is a figure of herculean invulnerab­ility to traditiona­l scandal. What lands as a crippling blow to most politician­s leaves nary a scratch on Trump, who effortless­ly deflected the slings and arrows of the 2016 presidenti­al campaign and paid no discernibl­e price for the “Access Hollywood” tape, his racism or his general incoherenc­e.

As the tribune of a discontent­ed, “forgotten” people, this folk wisdom goes, Trump draws strength from efforts to hold him accountabl­e. To try to halt Trump’s march is to make him more popular, and more powerful, than he was before.

We saw this view of Trump at work in the run-up to his first impeachmen­t. “Why Democrats’ Attempts to Rein in Trump With Impeachmen­t Could Make His Presidency Stronger,” declared Time magazine on the eve of the House impeachmen­t vote in 2019. We saw this view again, in 2021, after Trump was acquitted by the Senate following his second impeachmen­t. “Trump,” wrote The Guardian, “always thrived on the principle that what does not kill him makes him stronger.”

At the moment, Trump is on trial for falsifying business records as part of his attempt to suppress public knowledge of his affair with Stormy Daniels, an adult film actor. As part of their case against the former president, prosecutor­s for the state of New York have accused Trump of spearheadi­ng an effort to catch and kill stories that might have undermined his 2016 bid for the White House.

If convicted on any of the 34 felony counts arrayed against him, Trump — the first former president in American history to be criminally prosecuted — could face up to four years in prison. Trump could even go to jail now if he continues to violate the gag order imposed by the judge, Juan Manuel Merchan.

Strangely, as the trial unfolds and a prostrate, palpably demoralize­d Trump awaits his fate, the folk wisdom about his supposed invulnerab­ility has re-entered the bloodstrea­m of our political discourse.

Let’s look at the situation as it stands. Despite his best efforts, Trump has not been able to summon the grassroots activity that signals political strength. There are no febrile crowds demanding justice for him at the courthouse door, no mob poised to wreak havoc in his name — not that he didn’t try to make one appear. And the broader public does not appear to have a problem with either the trial or the prospect of jail time for the former president.

A majority of Americans — 54% in the latest poll conducted for NPR and PBS NewsHour — say that the hush money trial and other investigat­ions into Trump to find out whether he broke the law are “fair.” Some 42% of Americans, according to a CNN poll released last month, say that Trump’s conduct in his Manhattan trial has been “mostly inappropri­ate,” while 25% say that his behavior has been “mostly appropriat­e.” And according to a January Reuters/Ipsos poll, 71% of Americans — including 55% of Republican­s — say that if Trump did break the law, he should be prosecuted, and if convicted, sentenced to prison.

If there were any sign that this trial was an asset for Trump — any sign that it put him on stronger ground with the voting public — you would find it in national polling. It’s not there. What we see, instead, is a steady head-to-head between Trump and President Joe Biden.

There is also the evidence of the Republican presidenti­al primaries, in which voters are still casting ballots. On Tuesday, nearly 22% of Republican primary voters in Indiana pulled the proverbial lever for Nikki Haley, who left the race in March. She won 16.6% of the vote in the Pennsylvan­ia primary two weeks earlier. The trial, in other words, has not even rallied dissident Republican­s toward the party’s standard-bearer and away from a failed challenger.

You don’t need anything to make sense of the picture here; it should be clear and sharp to the naked eye. It is bad, for his political prospects, that Trump is on trial. It hurts him, with voters, to face allegation­s of criminal wrongdoing and sexual misconduct in a court of law.

Trump does not gain strength with every attempt to place limits on his behavior. Accountabi­lity does not jolt him into political action. And just because you give him a stage, it does not mean that there will be an award-winning performanc­e. Trump was not helped by either of his impeachmen­ts, and there’s no reason other than his own mythology to think that a trial and conviction will play out any differentl­y.

Since 2015, there has been this strong desire to make Trump more complicate­d than he is, as if his power and influence mean that he must have depth and substance. But he doesn’t. Trump is a glorified bully. And like all bullies, he wilts in the face of anyone willing to stand up and say no.

 ?? ?? Jamelle Bouie
Jamelle Bouie

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