Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

President Trump may be most memorable for his lies

- Clarence Page Clarence Page, a member of the Tribune Editorial Board, blogs atwww.chicago tribune.com/pagespage. cpage@chicagotri­bune.com Twitter @cptime

For those who occasional­ly have dared me to say something nice about President Donald Trump, here you go: His first— and, I pray, only— term in office has taught me a lot.

The lessons began with Sean Spicer’s blistering insistence as the new president’s press secretary that the inaugurati­on had brought out “the largest audience ever to witness an inaugurati­on, period, both in person and around the globe.”

The liewas laughably false, as anyone with vision could see by comparing his crowd with those of former presidents, particular­ly Barack Obama and Lyndon Johnson.

But Iwas one of many who could not laugh at the sense of menace in this bizarre announceme­nt. The lesson confirmed repeatedly over the years has been that, to this president, the blatant obviousnes­s of the lies doesn’t matter as much as howmany people let him get away with them and actually become his enablers.

All presidents lie fromtime to time, Trump supporters have assured me, a reality fromwhich I take no comfort. Some like to bring up as an example, “If you like your health plan, you can keep it.” ThatwasOba­ma’s often-repeated promise about his proposed health care plan, quickly rebranded by Republican critics as “Obamacare.”

Actually, most of uswere able to keep our health plans, if they offered enough coverage to meet the Affordable Care Act’s standards. But that’s not easy to squeeze into a catchy bumper sticker.

Still, we can only wish that President Trump’s lieswere as easy to count on one hand. Instead they have been so frequent that TheWashing­ton Post’s Fact Checker keeps a running tally of “false or misleading claims”— by the end of August it topped 22,247 claims in 1,316 days.

More significan­t than the number of falsehoods or exaggerati­ons is how easily he has gotten awaywith them. He dismisses media correction­s as “fake news,” which tickles his base, the one group to which he gives top priority.

Previous presidents tended to campaign in the fashion President Richard Nixon reportedly described as “run to the right” in the primary campaigns then “run to the center” in the general election to pick up independen­t swing voters and moderate Democrats.

Trump, a newcomer to elective office but an old hand at salesmansh­ip, broke that mold. He continued to run to the right during the 2016 campaign, reading and reassuring his base at every turn. That strategywo­n him 2.9 million fewer votes than Hillary Clinton received, but enough votes in the Electoral College to win the WhiteHouse— and rub it in the faces of anyone who didn’t vote for him.

This, too, was educationa­l. His Electoral College victory led to divide-andconquer policies and a strategy of political tribalism thatwould impress any old-school big-city political boss: Empower your base and they will protect you by intimidati­ng any congressio­nal Republican­s whomight get in yourway — like, for example, the Grand Old Party’s elders who informedNi­xon that it was time for him to resign.

Instead, today’s GOP leaders in Congress have becomeTrum­p’s enablers, protecting him fromimpeac­hment and innumerabl­e other attempts to hold him accountabl­e for his playful relationsh­ip with reality.

“Truthful hyperbole” is howTrump describes his frequent exaggerati­ons in his bestsellin­g “The Art of the Deal.”

Let the buyer beware. The skimpiness of his governing abilities appears to be catching up to him this year as he tackles such unexpected crises as the COVID-19 pandemic.

His long-held belief inNormanVi­ncent Peale’s “The Power of Positive Thinking,” fortifiedw­ith his “truthful hyperbole,” seems to have distanced him fromnegati­ve realities. He repeatedly declares thatwe’re “rounding the corner” on the coronaviru­s, when plainlywe are not. His WhiteHouse science office even boasted this pastweek that one of his major achievemen­ts has been “ending theCOVID-19 pandemic.” We wish.

In that fashion, the president’s avoidance of bad news becomes dangerous misinforma­tion. He has divided Americans along tribal lines and, aided by some overly zealous conservati­ve media, nurtured an alternativ­e reality of conspiracy theories about a nonexisten­t “deep state.”

Ironically, this latticewor­k of lies actually endangers supporters in his own base who aremost likely to believe his cavalier dismissals of the need for masks, school closings and other precaution­s that can truly “round the corner” on the pandemic.

I’ve had some readers, detecting to their apparent delight that I’m a triggered liberal, sarcastica­lly ask me what I’m going to do if I don’t have this president to kick around anymore. Good question. I’m eager to find out.

 ?? MANDEL NGAN/GETTY-AFP ?? President Donald Trump acknowledg­es the crowd during his swearing-in ceremony Jan. 20, 2017, at the U.S. Capitol.
MANDEL NGAN/GETTY-AFP President Donald Trump acknowledg­es the crowd during his swearing-in ceremony Jan. 20, 2017, at the U.S. Capitol.
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