Karl Rove
 
 
Shuffling Deck Chairs on the USS Trump 
August 18, 2016 

 
 
In the movie “City Slickers,” Jack Palance tells Billy Crystal that the  
secret of life is “One thing, just one thing. You stick to that, and 
everything  else don’t mean s—.” When Mr. Crystal asks what that “one thing” 
is, 
the old  cowboy replies, “That’s what you gotta figure out.” 
As Donald Trump shakes up his campaign’s management team for the second 
time  in two months, maybe the new crowd—and, more importantly, Mr. Trump—will 
finally  figure out that the “one thing” of a presidential campaign is 
message  discipline. Without it, Mr. Trump has caused controversy after 
controversy,  generating loads of dreadful media coverage. 
Since the Republican convention in July, Mr. Trump has delivered two major  
policy addresses. But by themselves, speeches are not nearly enough. They 
must  be part of a comprehensive narrative that explains his views in depth, 
contrasts  them with Hillary Clinton’s, and leads swing and undecided voters 
to his side.  The same story must be delivered by the candidate’s 
appearances, advocates,  advertising and other campaign activity. That’s not 
happening. 
Take last week’s economic address in Detroit. Delivered from a 
teleprompter,  it was generally well received. Mr. Trump outlined his agenda in 
broad 
terms,  covering tax reform, trade agreements, a moratorium on new regulations 
and  increased domestic energy production. 
He should have spent subsequent days fleshing it out. For example, he could 
 have devoted Tuesday to explaining how tax reform would create jobs and  
Wednesday to visiting families hurt by ObamaCare. On Thursday, after Mrs.  
Clinton’s own economic speech called for new “infrastructure” spending, Mr.  
Trump could have mocked her ideas as a return of President Obama’s failed 
2009  stimulus package. Then on Friday he could have appeared with workers 
angry about  unfair trade practices. This kind of schedule would have presented 
Mr. Trump  with a mix of different backgrounds and surrogates in support of 
his theme.  That’s how a successful campaign does things. 
Instead, Mr. Trump lost control of the narrative with his erratic 
utterances.  On Tuesday he told a rally that “Second Amendment people” might 
prevent 
a future  President Hillary Clinton from filling Supreme Court vacancies. 
On Wednesday he  advanced a blame-the-press story line, calling the coverage 
of him “disgusting”  and “incredibly dishonest.” The same day, he claimed 
Barack Obama and Mrs.  Clinton were the “founder” and “co-founder” of 
Islamic State. By Friday he was  insisting that his remarks were “sarcastic.” 
(They were not.) A week that was  supposed to be devoted to economics turned 
into a disaster. 
This week has so far proceeded along the same lines. Mr. Trump started 
Monday  with a teleprompter speech on Islamic terrorism that generated good 
coverage. By  Tuesday he had dropped terrorism and changed the subject. Hillary 
Clinton, he  told a Wisconsin rally, “is against the police, believe me.” 
But voters are not  in a believing mood. They want proof. 
Instead of unsettling sound bites, Mr. Trump should offer a sustained 
attack  on the policies and failings of Mrs. Clinton—backed with evidence. He 
should  explain how he will put the country on the right track. Even if he does 
 everything right from here on, given his terrible mistakes so far, he may 
well  lose in November. But if he doesn’t change tactics now, he is likely 
to be wiped  out. 
The new Team Trump should decide what message it wants Americans to hear 
each  day. Then it must craft language and events to present that message, and 
 convince the candidate to stick to it. The focus ought to be on the 20% of 
 voters who are undecided or have moved reluctantly toward Mrs. Clinton, 
not the  nearly 40% already committed to Mr. Trump.

-- 
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