Dayton Daily News

Trump brings new edge to Reagan’s ‘South Succotash’

- Clarence Page

President Donald Trump expressed a familiar beef in his recent travels: The “fake news” media won’t cover his fake news.

“What you’re seeing and what you’re reading is not what’s happening,” he told a crowd estimated at 4,000 Tuesday at the Veterans of Foreign Wars convention in Kansas City.

What people were seeing and reading was a mixed picture of whether his trade war is a good idea. For example, Trump would celebrate Thursday the reopening of a U.S. Steel plant in Granite City, Ill., near St. Louis. Officials credited the reopening to Trump’s steel and aluminum tariffs on China and other steel exporters.

But China struck back with retaliator­y tariffs that were hurting the state’s soybean farmers, who, as the Chicago Tribune reported, ship more to China than any other state. By Thursday, in Iowa, Trump would be touting a plan to provide as much as $12 billion in emergency relief to farmers caught in the crossfire of the trade war that his tariffs ignited.

At the VFW gathering he singled out a sad story about farmers that he saw on NBC earlier in the day. “It was heart-throbbing,” he said. I think he meant “heartbreak­ing,” unless he has a previously undisclose­d coronary condition. “In fact, I wanted to say, ‘I got to do something about this Trump. Terrible.’ “

But, no, the real problem, he said in an oddly paranoid-sounding scenario, is that NBC’s piece was “done by the lobbyists and by the people that they hire,” whoever that is.

Advising farmers and other Americans to “just be a little patient,” he pulled a familiar rhetorical move: He pointed at the press riser, attacked “the fake news” media and assured the crowd, “Stick with us. Don’t believe the crap you see from these people.”

With that, he reminded me of another president’s media complaints. “Is it news,” asked Ronald Reagan in 1982, “that some fellow out in South Succotash someplace who has just been laid off should be interviewe­d nationwide?”

You bet. The journalist’s job is to cover news, not make us comfortabl­e.

But Reagan, as some of us news consumers recall, responded to such media disclosure­s with jolly kindness compared to today’s president.

After Trump’s speech, in which he laced into prominent Democrats, the nonpartisa­n VFW issued something else that differenti­ated him from Reagan: an apology. “We were disappoint­ed to hear some of our members boo the press,” VFW spokeswoma­n Randi Law said in a statement. “We rely on the media to help spread the VFW’s message, and CNN, NBC, ABC, FOX, CBS, and others on site today, were our invited guests.”

Thank you, fellow veterans. As a Vietnam-era Army draftee, I was as disappoint­ed to hear the VFW crowd’s booing along with the president as I was by the booing that similarly broke out when Trump attacked Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama in his speech to the National Boy Scout Jamboree last year.

Trump all but gave the game away by declaring, “What you’re seeing and what you’re reading is not what’s happening.” We need to be aware of the polarizing impact competing versions of reality can have on our democracy. Otherwise we risk devolving into the divided society our real enemies want us to be.

 ??  ?? He writes for the Chicago Tribune.
He writes for the Chicago Tribune.

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