Walker County Messenger

Emperor Trump’s inauspicio­us debut

- Gene Lyons Arkansas DemocratGa­zette

the most campaign promises broken in the shortest time.

(Trump never settles lawsuits. Except when he does, paying $25 million in chump change to reimburse gullible students defrauded by “Trump University.” Given that he’s also the defendant in something like 75 additional lawsuits accusing him of everything from stiffing contractor­s to deceptive advertisin­g, things could get expensive.)

Alas, Trump seems to confuse the presidency with being the emcee on a “reality TV” program. Or with being Emperor of Lilliput. It’s hard to say. It’s not merely the daily spectacle of veteran Republican hacks and flub-a-dubs like Chris Christie and Rick Perry being escorted into Trump’s garishly appointed penthouse to perch upon his gilded chairs. The man clearly has no accurate idea of the powers of the presidency: what he can do and what he can’t as the elected leader of a constituti­onal democracy.

Consider the abandonmen­t of his vow to prosecute “Crooked Hillary” Clinton for her imagined crimes. At campaign rallies, Trump led enthusiast­ic supporters chanting, “Lock her up!” During their second televised debate, he promised Clinton to her face that, “If I win, I am going to instruct my attorney general to get a special prosecutor to look into your situation, because there’s never been so many lies, so much deception.”

Somewhat haughtily, Hillary missed an opportunit­y to inform Trump that the president of the United States has no such power. There are elaborate mechanisms in the law to prevent the president from meddling in criminal cases. And a good thing, too. Do you really want to live in a country whose president can order his political opponents jailed? No, you don’t.

Probably Hillary assumed that anybody who would even consider voting for her already knew that. Indeed, thanks largely to the epic failure of Kenneth Starr’s efforts to prosecute both Clintons during the make-believe “Whitewater” scandal, the Independen­t Counsel law was allowed to expire in 1999, and good riddance.

Might Republican­s be tempted to bring it back, in the way they bring back massive budget deficits whenever they’re in power? Not to harass an already defeated Democrat, no.

For that matter, no president can order the Department of Justice to drop an investigat­ion, either. Given the harm FBI Director James Comey’s unethical meddling in the election campaign did to his own reputation, it’s easy to imagine him relishing an opportunit­y to tell Trump to stick it where the sun don’t shine.

Appearing on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” Kellyanne Conway made it sound as if the great man was being magnanimou­s. “I think Hillary Clinton still has to face the fact that a majority of Americans don’t find her honest or trustworth­y,” Conway allowed, “but if Donald Trump can help her heal, then perhaps that’s a good thing.”

Actually, almost 2 million more Americans voted for Clinton than for Trump, although I doubt she finds the thought comforting.

People aren’t exactly enthralled with Trump’s honesty. In the last Fox News poll before the election, 60 percent of voters said Trump was neither honest nor trustworth­y enough to be president. Judging by his performanc­e to date, it’s hard to see those numbers improving.

Meanwhile, Trump invited news media big shots in for a leaping and creeping session at Trump Tower. According to The New York Post, the president-elect mercilessl­y bullied the assembled TV executives and talking heads. “It was like a (bleeping) firing squad,” one source claimed.

“Trump kept saying, ‘We’re in a room of liars, the deceitful, dishonest media who got it all wrong ...’ He called out (CNN president) Jeff Zucker by name and said everyone at CNN was a liar, and CNN was (a) network of liars,” the Post reported.

Talk about ingratitud­e! The cable news network’s decision to treat Trump’s comings and goings as the No. 1 news story of 2016 is precisely what saddled

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