[This week, Trump invited the Senate to the White House for a briefing
on North Korea. Virtually every expert on North Korea from across the
political spectrum has called a preemptive strike a very bad idea. A
competent administration would heed these words. An incompetent
administration might decide to roll the dice because it doesn’t
understand the game, the odds, or the consequences.
If you thought the first 100 days were bad, prepare yourself for
something incomparably worse, something that even Trump country would
recognize as an epic fail.]

http://fpif.org/worst-100-days-ever/

Worst. 100 Days. Ever.
Are Trump's stumbles a brilliant ploy to "deconstruct the state," a
political performance, or actual incompetence?

By John Feffer, April 26, 2017

If I were a Trump supporter, I’d be furious at the coverage of the
president’s first 100 days. The mainstream media has engaged in a bout
of competitive schadenfreude as headline writers and columnists vie
for the distinction of deriving the most pleasure from the
administration’s failures.

Pundits and journalists have made much of the legislation unpassed,
the positions unfilled, the appointments unseated, and the promises
unmet. It is of a piece with the campaign coverage.

This was, after all, the un-president: a man without qualifications to
serve, without a popular mandate from the voters, and, once elected,
without much interest in the day-to-day slog of governing. At every
opportunity, he seems to prefer to decamp to his Florida mansion,
retreat to the nearest links, or set off on yet another “victory tour”
of the states he won in the election.

In the lead up to the 100-day mark on April 29, ABC and The Washington
Post published a poll demonstrating that Trump, at this juncture in
his tenure, is also the most unpopular president in the modern age.
Even the administration’s last-minute efforts to tap into the more
nationalistic sentiments of the electorate by bombing the Syrian Army,
bombing the Taliban in Afghanistan, and threatening to bomb the North
Koreans seemed to make little difference. Only 42 percent of the
country approve of the president’s performance (compared to Obama’s 69
percent at the same point in his first term).

At the bottom of The Washington Post article on this poll, however, is
a fascinating little tidbit. Pollsters asked the respondents which
candidate they supported in the presidential election. Not
surprisingly, the figures corresponded more or less to the popular
vote. Respondents said that they favored Clinton over Trump by 46
percent to 43 percent.

But then, when asked whom they would vote for if the election were
held again today, the respondents delivered a surprise. They actually
favored Trump over Clinton, 43 to 40 percent.

That’s astonishing. The candidate who lost the popular vote, who has
done pretty much nothing since the inauguration other than put his
foot in his mouth or on the putting green, who has the lowest approval
ratings after 100 days of any president in the modern era, would still
beat Hillary Clinton in a rematch — and probably not just in the
Electoral College either.

There are three reasons for this cognitive dissonance. First, although
her greatest sin is that she’s a conventional politician, Hillary
Clinton inspires considerable hatred across large tracts of American
politics. Second, a certain fraction of Trump supporters will stand by
their man even if he were to sweep aside his orange comb-over to
reveal a pair of devil’s horns. According to the same poll, although
only 85 percent of Clinton voters pledged their continued allegiance
to their candidate, a remarkable 96 percent of Trump voters refused to
budge in their support. Talk about brand loyalty.

Which brings us to the third reason. The Trump administration has
indeed displayed unprecedented incompetence in its first 100 days. But
not everyone in the country views that incompetence the same way that
the mainstream media does. Indeed, two separate and opposite theories
have emerged to explain away what, according to the common-sense view,
looks like a lot of people in high places who just don’t know what
they’re doing.

The Uses of Incompetence

According to the adherents of the first theory, the administration of
Donald Trump is so dedicated to the deconstruction of the state that
it’s using incompetence as a tool. What better way to tear down
liberal social programs and undo the regulatory apparatus than to
install the manifestly ill-equipped, like Scott Pruitt at EPA or Rick
Perry at DOE, in agencies devoted to missions they either don’t
understand or don’t appreciate?

Meanwhile, President Trump is making contradictory statements,
changing his positions on a daily basis, and spouting outright
falsehoods in order to throw off his adversaries, both domestically
and abroad. His enemies will underestimate him. They won’t be able to
predict his actions. They’ll be scared into adopting conciliatory
positions for fear that, like a ruthless and entirely unprepared
narcissist, he’ll lash out irrationally and without his country’s best
interests at heart.

In other words, what might seem like mental illness is in fact
deliberate craftiness.

The second theory holds that the Trump administration is honestly
trying to get things done, but a “deep state” — composed either of
Obama appointees or national security operatives — is opposing him at
every turn. Indeed, this deep state is so influential that it’s turned
Trump’s head on Syria (to bomb Assad), China (to make nice), Russia
(to destroy the promise of détente), and trade (to back away from a
border-adjustment tax).

The “deep state,” according to the more conspiratorial sources, is
aligned with a range of international actors, all arrayed against
Trump. This list includes international financial institutions,
transnational political entities like the UN, and liberal elites (who
might not even be liberal, like Angela Merkel of Germany).

Certainly Trump advisers like Steve Bannon are committed to cutting
back on all the parts of the government they don’t like (while beefing
up those parts they do). And certainly the administration has
encountered considerable resistance inside the Beltway and in the
world at large to its more radical programs. Yet these explanations
are not fully satisfactory.

Which leaves the third possibility — that the incompetence of Trump
and his cronies is neither a strategy nor the result of a
counter-strategy. The U.S. government is a tremendously complex
mechanism, and even smart policy wonks like Bill Clinton and Barack
Obama made big mistakes in their first 100 days. Install an ignorant
and incurious president who’s brought in a coterie of the
narrow-minded and what do you expect?

Thus, the Trump administration has engaged in a stunning display of
ham-fisted, tone-deaf, and downright incomprehensible policy
maneuvers. It mishandled its travel ban (twice), fumbled the
health-care replacement bill, and alienated members of Congress on
both sides of the aisle with its initial budget proposal. Trump has
had embarrassing interactions with the leaders of Russia, Australia,
and Germany (among others). The only obvious victory in its first
three months has been the appointment of a Supreme Court justice, but
that required Senate Republicans to deploy the “nuclear option” and
confirm with a simple majority (rather than the hallowed tradition of
the filibuster-proof 60 votes).

Then there have been the self-destructive appointments. The
congressional confirmation process weeded out a few of the worst
performers, like Labor Department designee Andrew Puzder, while
scandal claimed others, like National Security Adviser Michael Flynn
and would-be NSC communications head Monica Crowley.

But the Trump administration has also been quite effective in
auto-destruction, as James Hohmann points out in the Post. Here are
some of the early departures from the Trump team: Chris Christie (head
of the transition team), Katie Walsh (deputy chief of staff), Boris
Epshteyn (special assistant to the president), Gerrit Lansing (chief
digital adviser), Anthony Scaramucci (head of the Office of Public
Liaison and Intergovernmental Affairs), K.T. McFarland (deputy
national security advisor), Craig Deere (NSC senior director for
Western Hemisphere Affairs), and Shermichael Singleton (senior adviser
to Ben Carson). Close to the exit door are counter-terrorism advisor
Sebastian Gorka (for his ties to a Nazi-affiliated organization) and
Sean Spicer (whose incompetence as press secretary has become
legendary).

The Trump revolution has been devouring itself at record speed.

What Americans Think

Public opinion pollsters suffered a huge loss of credibility after the
results of the 2016 presidential election came in. Up to the last
minute, the well-respected FiveThirtyEight site was giving Hillary
Clinton a 71.4 percent chance of winning.

One of the problems with polling is that it doesn’t capture the
relative fervency of the respective constituencies. Hillary Clinton
had fire in the belly, but many of her supporters did not. Trump’s
supporters, on the other hand, were more fired up than even their
candidate.

That’s why the latest poll out of the Chicago Council on Global
Affairs is somewhat misleading. The headline is that the U.S. public
sides more with the mainstream foreign policy establishment than with
Donald Trump on issues from trade to NATO. Thus, according to the
poll, a clear majority of Americans favor U.S. commitment to existing
security alliances, embrace economic globalization and free trade, and
support robust engagement in world affairs.

The Council acknowledges, however, that on certain key issues, the
public diverges from the elite:

The American public and opinion leaders are in fact divided over
several key issues, including the importance of protecting American
jobs, U.S. immigration policy, and the importance of protecting U.S.
allies’ security. Perhaps not coincidentally, these areas where
elite-public gaps exist are also the issue areas where Donald Trump’s
message has resounded the loudest.

Wait a second. These three positions are in fact the flip side of the
three issues where the preferences of the public and the Blob
supposedly overlap. Americans have a rhetorical commitment to
globalization but they actually put American jobs first. They believe
in NATO but they actually don’t see the important of coming to the
defense of allies, which is the essential element of the security
alliance. And they want the United States to remain engaged in the
world but not to the extent that the world engages with us by coming
to our shores.

Then, if you look closer at the supposed overlap, it dissolves into
the same problem of fervency that threw off the compasses of pollsters
in November 2016. For instance, 41 percent of Republican voters view
globalization negatively and 36 percent want the United States to stay
out of world affairs. Meanwhile, 79 percent want to “build a wall” to
keep out immigrants, and 75 percent see Islamic fundamentalism as a
critical threat. The numbers are even starker for Trump’s core
supporters.

Now take another look at Trump’s first 100 days from this perspective.
The administration cancelled U.S. participation in the Trans Pacific
Partnership trade agreement and made an expensive bid to keep U.S.
manufacturing jobs. It has continued to press for the “Wall” on the
border with Mexico in the face of congressional opposition. It signed
executive orders to keep out people from seven (then six)
predominantly Muslim countries.

Everything else is noise. Sure, some of Trump’s far-right supporters
were angry that he bombed the Syrian Army, didn’t withdraw the United
States from NATO, alienated Moscow, and banished Steve Bannon from the
National Security Council. But Trump’s core supporters don’t care much
about these issues. What the liberal media sees as failures,
flip-flops, or sheer incompetence comes across, in Trump country, as
good-faith efforts to upend the foreign policy consensus and
fundamentally reorient U.S. priorities.

Incompetence, in their view, is fake news. The first 100 days, as
staged by fading reality star Donald Trump, has been practically a
second American Revolution.

But incompetence has very real effects. Domestically, the courts and
Congress and civil society can contain the damage to a certain extent.
Internationally, the damage could be catastrophic.

This week, Trump invited the Senate to the White House for a briefing
on North Korea. Virtually every expert on North Korea from across the
political spectrum has called a preemptive strike a very bad idea. A
competent administration would heed these words. An incompetent
administration might decide to roll the dice because it doesn’t
understand the game, the odds, or the consequences.

If you thought the first 100 days were bad, prepare yourself for
something incomparably worse, something that even Trump country would
recognize as an epic fail.

John Feffer is the director of Foreign Policy In Focus and the author
of the dystopian novel Splinterlands.



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