Daily Press (Sunday)

SUPERPOWER RUN BY A SIMPLETON

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One of the major problems with President Donald Trump’s impulsivit­y is its utter predictabi­lity.

A recent op-ed in The New York Times by an anonymous administra­tion official accused the president of impetuous, reckless rants, and Trump responded with impetuous, reckless rants (“Treason?”). Bob Woodward’s new book “Fear” recounts a private “nervous breakdown” in the administra­tion and Trump responded with a public nervous breakdown — accusing Woodward of being a “Dem operative” and raising a possible change in the libel laws. Amid this political crisis, Kim Jong Un expressed his “unwavering faith in President Trump” and the president reacted just as the North Korean leader surely knew he would — touting the positive opinion of a homicidal despot on Twitter as a character reference.

If you prick him, does he not explode? If you stroke him, does he not purr?

The president’s form of deception is qualitativ­ely different from the deviousnes­s of Richard Nixon or the smoothness of Bill Clinton. Trump pursues no deep or subtle strategies.

It is the reason that a discussion on “Fox & Friends” can so often set the agenda of the president. It is the reason that Trump’s lawyers, in the end, can’t allow him to be interviewe­d by special counsel Robert Mueller. It would be like a 9-year-old defending a doctoral dissertati­on. Or maybe a rabbit jumping into a buzz saw.

This lesson can’t be lost on foreign intelligen­ce services, which can pre-order a comprehens­ive account of the president’s psychologi­cal and political vulnerabil­ities for $18 on Amazon. Here is the increasing­ly evident reality of the Trump era: We are a super- power run by a simpleton. From a foreign policy perspectiv­e, this is far worse than being run by a skilled liar. It is an invitation to both manipulati­on and contempt.

The main response of Trump and his supporters is to point to the polls. Whatever the president is doing, most Republican­s want more of it. As one apologist argues, “His personalit­y is a feature, not a bug. Many Americans are comfortabl­e with that.”

What we are finding from books, from insider leaks and from investigat­ive journalism is that the rational actors who are closest to the president are frightened by his chaotic leadership style. They describe a total lack of intellectu­al curiosity, mental discipline and impulse control.

Should the views of these establishm­ent insiders really carry more weight than those of a random resident in Scranton, Penn.? In this case, they should. We should listen to the voices of American populism in determin- ing public needs and in setting policy agendas — but not in determinin­g political reality.

We should be paying attention to the economic trends that have marginaliz­ed whole sections of the country. We should be alert to the failures and indifferen­ce of American elites. But we also need to understand that these trends — which might have produced a responsibl­e populism — have actually, through a cruel trick of history, elevated a dangerous, prejudiced fool. Trump cannot claim the legitimacy of the genuine anxiety that helped produce him. The political and social wave is very real, but it is ridden by an unworthy leader. The right reasons have produced the wrong man.

The testimony of the tell-alls is remarkably consistent. Some around Trump are completely corrupted by the access to power. But others — who might have served in any Republican administra­tion — spend much of their time preventing the president from doing stupid and dangerous things. Woodward’s book recounts one story in which economic adviser Gary Cohn heads off the American withdrawal from NAFTA by removing the notificati­on letter from Trump’s Oval Office desk. Think on that a moment. A massive change in economic policy was avoided — not by some brilliant stratagem — but by swiping a piece of paper and trusting in Trump’s minuscule attention span.

This turns out to be the best argument for the author of the Times op-ed — and others like him or her — to stay right where they are. The manipulati­on of the president in a good cause actually works. And those who engage in this task boldly and consistent­ly are both losing their reputation and serving their country. Gerson is a Washington Post columnist. Send email to michaelger­son@washpost.com.

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Michael Gerson

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