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Can Trump
Fool the People All of the Time?
By James J
Zogby
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
March 3, 2019
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President Trump giving a speech to his supporters at the CPAC
conference, March 2, 2019 |
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"You Can Fool Some of the People"
Among Abraham Lincoln's many notable traits and extraordinary
accomplishments are the pithy quotations he bequeathed to posterity that
speak to his wisdom and understanding of human nature. One of my
favorites is "You can fool some of the people all of the time, all of
the people some of the time, but you can't fool all of the people all of
the time." There have been many occasions when I have referred back to
this piece of Lincoln wisdom since Donald Trump first began his race for
the White House. Following his election as President of the United
States, I am daily reminded of this quote.
Instead of seeing the
16th US president as his guide, Trump, it appears, takes his cue from a
quote from Peter Weiss' play "Marat/Sade" where the main character
speaking disparagingly about how easy it is to propagate falsehoods
among desperate masses says, "And anyone believes what they hear over
and over again."
Realizing that he commands media attention as
the occupant of the White House, control of a massive following on
Twitter, and an echo chamber consisting of Fox News and several popular
talk radio programs, Trump has
propagated myth after myth on his susceptible base. Most
concerning is the fact that his myths, repeated over and over, have been
believed.
This trait was in evidence well before he entered the
Republican contest in 2015. Early in the Obama Administration, Donald
Trump was one of the leading proponents of what came to be known as the
"Birther Movement" – the myth suggesting that
Barack Obama was not born in the US and, therefore, ineligible
to serve as president. Alongside this falsehood was the suggestion that
Obama was really a "closet-Muslim" and was lying about
his Christian faith. Taken together, these two conspiracy theories
preyed on the alienation of white, middle aged, middle class born-again
Christian voters who were suffering from the economic dislocation
created by the Great Recession of 2008-9. By projecting these myths, the
GOP sought to delegitimize the 44th president. These false stories
provided fuel for the "Tea Party" movement, which aided the Republican
resurgence by giving the party control of Congress in 2010.
It
didn't end there, however. Real damage was done. Despite the passage of
time, the sad fact is that recent polling shows that at least a
plurality of Republicans still believe that Obama wasn't born in the US
and isn't a Christian.
Once Trump was in the White House, he
became more emboldened and more reliant on myth-making – regarding
matters big and ridiculously small – even when they were obviously and
provably untrue. He claimed that: the crowds at his Inauguration were
larger than Obama's; his ratings were the highest ever; his White House
operations ran like a well-oiled machine; he would bring jobs back to
the US, give everyone tax reductions and the best health insurance
coverage ever. In international affairs he promised: "the deal of
the century" for Israeli-Palestinian peace; to end the Iran nuclear deal
–"the worst deal ever made" and then show Obama how to get a great deal
by denuclearizing North Korea; build a wall on the southern border and
insist that Mexico would pay for it; and restore American prestige and
leadership in the world.
Trump did walk away from the
Iran deal (as well as the Paris Accords on Climate and the
Trans-Pacific Partnership) – but no one else followed. He shut the US
government down three times trying to force Congress to pay for
the wall since Mexico will not pay for it. We're still waiting
for the "deal of the century, and, meanwhile, US standing and confidence
in US leadership is at its lowest point since the middle of the George
W. Bush era.
Trump's domestic approval rating, which has never
been over 50%, is now in the low 40's. And yet his base remains secure
and, as a result, even moderate Republicans who are repulsed by the
president's behavior have hesitated to break with him – fearing the
backlash they may incur from his supporters. They call to mind the
members of the royal court in Hans Christian Andersen's "The Emperor's
New Clothes." They knew he had no such clothes, but were afraid to be
the first to break ranks and acknowledge it.
This past week,
however, has been as especially problematic one for the president and
his loyalists – and may be a turning point in this president's fortunes.
Three events were noteworthy.
The testimony of Michael Cohen,
Trump's long-time personal lawyer/"fixer" before the House Committee on
Oversight opened a window on several of the president's questionable
financial practices. The documentation Cohen provided will no doubt give
rise to deeper investigation in the future. It was noticed that while
Republican members of the committee were ruthless in their treatment of
Cohen, on no occasion did they speak in defense of the president. This
should be of concern to the White House.
Some observers
suspected that the White House scheduled the surprise summit with the
leader of North Korea in order to divert attention from Cohen's
appearance. Trump's hope that the summit would produce a much-needed win
collapsed when it ended abruptly without any agreement. In its
aftermath, even the president's advisers were quoted as having cautioned
him against the summit and about creating unreasonable expectations for
the ill-prepared meeting.
The week ended with revelations that
the president had directly intervened to counter the decision of
professional intelligence and national security staff to deny both
Trump's daughter and son-in-law "Top Secret" clearance.
Security officials, it appears, had decided that his son-in-law had not
been fully forthcoming in filling out his clearance forms and, in any
case, had questionable contacts and financial entanglements that made
him a security risk.
Now while some analysts say that it is the
president's prerogative to overrule the professional staff, what is
concerning is that he has publicly denied doing this – even though we
know that he did, in fact do it. It is also now known that the
president's decision in this matter so troubled his chief of staff and
his national security advisor that both wrote memoranda "for the record"
documenting their disapproval.
Will these events be enough to
shake the hold the president still has on his base or move loyal
Republicans to risk losing the support of this base? Or when even more
shocking revelations still to come from the investigations led by former
FBI chief Robert Mueller are released – will that do the trick?
Whose wisdom will win out – that of Abe Lincoln or the cynical view of
weak human nature expressed in Peter Weiss' play?
***
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