The Denver Post

Donald Trump’s failures make him even more dangerous

- By Timothy L. O'Brien Timothy L. O’Brien is the executive editor of Bloomberg Opinion.

Any remaining thoughts that President Donald Trump has been playing three-dimensiona­l chess while everyone else around him is engaged in less sophistica­ted pursuits should perish with his sudden abandonmen­t of tariff threats against Mexico.

The only thing Trump got from this stunt was yet another round of abundant attention as everyone tried to decipher the riddle of “what-is-this-unusual-and-loopyman-up to-this-time-becausehe’s-breaking-the-norms-of-generally-accepted-presidenti­al-behavior?” For Trump personally, the opportunit­y to generate and then bask in that kind of media buzz is, of course, far from nothing. Self-aggrandize­ment and self-preservati­on have motivated almost all of his thinking for decades.

Trump certainly grabbed the spotlight last week. After all, by unexpected­ly threatenin­g, via Twitter, to impose onerous tariffs on Mexico if it failed to help solve the immigratio­n and humanitari­an crisis spilling over from Central America and into the U.S., Trump set the global business and political communitie­s on edge.

And how many of us get a chance to pull off something that cool ourselves? Not just anybody can look and act the part of a Bond villain. Trump once told me, while driving together to one of his golf courses, that his favorite Bond villain was Auric Goldfinger, the chunky thug who wanted to wreck the global economy and help China and his own fortunes by tainting the U.S.’s gold supply at Fort Knox. “I thought Goldfinger was just a great character,” Trump said. “To me, he was the best of all the characters. Semibeliev­able.”

So over the course of a week, Trump got into character and played chicken with global trade, the economy, the southern border of the U.S., the lives of migrants and the financial security of tens of millions of people — before having to cave once the costs and peril of all of this became apparent. Trump’s enablers in Congress helped put an end to the madness because something more important (to them) than the rule of law, civility, ethics, equality, global stability, mature policymaki­ng, and the environmen­t was at stake: Money.

By Friday evening, Trump had to close down his show, taking comfort on Twitter the following day that “reviews” of his roleplayin­g “have been very good” — with the exception, he said, of the movie critics populating the “Fake and Corrupt News Media” at NBC, CNN, the New York Times and the Washington Post.

The truth of the matter is that Mexico, other than stepping up its own role policing the southern border in accordance with an earlier agreement, has conceded nothing — as Michael Shear and Maggie Haberman pointed out in The New York Times. After so much noise and distress, the author of “The Art of the Deal” was left empty-handed. “The decision marks a victory for Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, whose administra­tion had been pressing Trump to drop the tariff threat,” noted Bloomberg News reporters Josh Wingrove, Nick Wadhams, and Shannon Pettypiece.

But let’s not kid ourselves that this is an end to the White House playacting. This has happened before and will happen again. Trade negotiatio­ns with Japan and the European Union are coming and tortuous head-butting on trade and tariffs is already underway with China. There’s lots of room for Trump to turn incendiary in all of that. He knows little about policy but a lot about how to stoke the passions and resentment­s of his base. And he’s content to fabricate things to seduce his supporters into accepting the idea that he never loses and that he always has a secret card to play.

Trying to govern by threat and blunt force isn’t really governing at all, and if enough bluffs get called, the players on the other side of the table tend to stiffen their spines. That’s not a good scenario for anyone involved because a predictabl­y unpredicta­ble person lacking self-confidence, restraint and principled, courageous advisers may eventually try burning things down just to prove his point.

The president of the United States isn’t playing chess. But, like a kid with matches, he’s only too happy to play with fire.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States