Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Donald Trump’s pivot to Damascus

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If you turned on cable TV news Monday, chances are good that you caught Corey Lewandowsk­i fibbing that he doesn’t have a clue why Donald Trump fired him as his campaign manager. Of course he knows. In a series of interviews on several shows, Lewandowsk­i dodged every question, including from CNN’s Dana Bash whether Trump’s daughter Ivanka and her husband had anything to do with his dismissal. Tensions among them were well-known to campaign followers, but Lewandowsk­i shrugged off such concerns as typical of all campaigns.

No doubt. But Lewandowsk­i was a special case — he looked and acted more like a bodyguard/ bouncer than a campaign manager. At one Trump event, he was accused of assaulting a female reporter. On Monday night, however, there was no evidence of the tough guy. Rather, Lewandowsk­i portrayed a humble, thoughtful, soft-spoken, geewhiz guy who only wants to do the right thing for his country and get Trump elected.

Naturally, people wondered: How big is his golden parachute? And speculator­s wagered: He must have signed a confidenti­ality agreement. This is highly probable. Usually, when high-profile employees are escorted from the building, as Lewandowsk­i was, they tend to leave with two things: a check and a promise never to speak ill of the company.

And Trump company.

There’s no disagreeme­nt that Lewandowsk­i had become a liability. His brash style, which reflected that of his employer, rubbed many the wrong way. Moreover, Trump’s campaign is in dire straits. His poll numbers are slipping and are below any candidate’s, Democrat or Republican, in the past three election cycles.

Adding to his travails, Trump’s campaign cupboard is relatively bare with just $1.3 million compared to Hillary Clinton’s $42 million. Something had to change and somebody had to take the fall.

Or so the obvious theories have gone.

Another plausible theory the is far more cynical and seems more Trumpian. It wasn’t money or campaign discord — at least not exclusivel­y — that got Lew the boot. He was fired as a sacrifice to one of the few constituen­cies Trump hasn’t thus far insulted directly — and one he desperatel­y needs — evangelica­l Christians. Could it be mere coincidenc­e that just one day later — on Tuesday — Trump was scheduled to meet in New York with a congregati­on of about 900 Christian leaders to sort things out in advance of likely endorsemen­ts? That’s a rhetorical question.

Those gathered wanted to know more about the “real” Trump, to find a way to support him, despite his un-Christian behaviors and attitudes. And Trump’s purpose was to assure them that he’s really a good guy who loves the Lord, “believe me,” and just wants to make America great again.

The meeting was closed to media, especially The Washington Post, which Trump has banished from all events. It seems he doesn’t like the way the paper is covering him. Richard Nixon felt the same way.

But one imagines that his metamorpho­sis mirrors Lewandowsk­i’s. Remember Lewandowsk­i, the humble, soft-spoken, gee-whiz-I-justlove-my-country fellow? Just add “and-Jesus” after “country” and you’ll have a fair idea of how a new, improved Trump might appear. Not so much presidenti­al as born-again.

This is how I imagine Trump’s handling of the meeting: “Look, I never meant any of those things I said, not really. Sure, we need to secure our borders and be smarter about immigratio­n, but this doesn’t mean I dislike Mexicans or think they’re rapists, even though, I assume, some of them are.

“I just get carried away sometimes because I’m so passionate about making this country great again. God willing. Plus, to be perfectly honest, I was getting some really bad advice from my campaign manager and that’s why I had to let him go.” Ba-da-bing. Lewandowsk­i, not Trump, was the problem all along, you see. He told Trump to act like a raging, misogynist­ic, xenophobic, racist. Cleansed of Lewandowsk­i’s influence, he’s liberated to be his presidenti­al self. And, in this new light, the evangelica­l community can justify supporting this unlikely bearer of civilizati­on’s torch. Christians love the penitent sinner who has sought forgivenes­s and been reborn.

Not all will buy Trump’s reinventio­n, no matter what sort of incantatio­ns transpired Tuesday. Indeed, just across town on the same evening, another group of faith leaders gathered for dinner with members of “Better for America,” a new organizati­on aimed at finding and funding an alternativ­e to Trump and Hillary Clinton.

Barring divine interventi­on, they’re probably too late. Then again, miracles can happen. A penitent, born-again Trump would certainly be one.

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