Optimistic but plausible. 

https://mondaynote.com/trump-job-one-48e7c9e6a5c3#.i919ybxdi

Trump: Job One
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Photo by Gage Skidmore, via Flickr
by Jean-Louis Gassée

The apparent paradox of electing a businessman who has no elective office 
experience and lots of liabilities can boggle one’s mind. But we can clear the 
confusion by looking at Donald Trump’s one and only goal from now on.

“I am saddened, but not surprised”. That’s the cliché du jour after last 
Tuesday’s vote, and, one fears, it will remain so for many weeks to come. We’re 
also saddened — but certainly not surprised — to see so many forecasters of 
yesterday’s weather now tell us why and how Hillary Clinton lost to Donald 
Trump. We all should have seen it coming — these Chinese flag makers did.

Post-trumpem forensics range from identity politics to economics, from gender 
trouble to bad polling techniques and FBI conspiracies. For completeness, CNN 
generously lists 24 theories that explain why Trump won. Why not 25? As the 
author of the CNN article obligingly notes:

“For now, though, we are left to sketch the first draft of history. And, like 
so many rough outlines, this one is a little messy.”

One fears this is not written with tongue deeply set in cheek.

On a similar note, there must be a special humor prize for a post that condemns 
The unbearable smugness of the press. Written without discernible irony, the 
piece appears on…the CBS News site, a company whose CEO, Les Moonves, called 
Trump’s run a “damn good thing for CBS”.

Yet another prize should be handed to David Plouffe who, in a NY Times op-ed, 
establishes his credentials by telling us that he “managed one Obama 
presidential campaign and oversaw another from the White House” and then 
recites the eight things (no less) that he got wrong about the election. My 
favorite twitterer, the erudite and epigrammatic @counternotions (a.k.a. 
Kontra), has this sharp retort for Plouffe’s whitewashing:

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Sometimes it takes more than one torpedo to sink a dreadnought, but 24 theories 
or eight factors have no actual explanatory power. They are, in Bill Gates’ 
vocabulary, random, worthless idea noise.

Fortunately, we have a few worthy explainers, people who told us in advance 
that Trump would win and, more importantly, why and how.

Last Summer, Michael Moore laid out an eloquent (he always is) and coherent (he 
sometimes isn’t) account of Trump’s plan to conquer the rust-belt swing states. 
For good measure, this committed Democrat points the finger at his candidate 
[as always edits and emphasis mine]:

“Let’s face it: Our biggest problem here isn’t Trump — it’s Hillary. She is 
hugely unpopular — nearly 70% of all voters think she is untrustworthy and 
dishonest. She represents the old way of politics, not really believing in 
anything other than what can get you elected. That’s why she fights against 
gays getting married one moment, and the next she’s officiating a gay marriage. 
Young women are among her biggest detractors…]

Then we have Scott Adams, the creator of the extremely successful Dilbert comic 
strip (and a trained hypnotist). Adams began projecting a Trump victory 
eighteen months ago and explained, in a series of almost daily blog posts, that 
this unorthodox, inexperienced, and heavily-baggaged candidate would win due to 
his talent as a “master-persuader”. In Adams’ view,Trump won the Republican 
nomination and then the presidency by basing his campaign not on rationality 
but on appeals to the emotions. Trump’s victory wasn’t the landslide that Adams 
predicted in a March 2016 Washington Post article, but it was an earthquake.

Today, there is much concern about the impact of a Trump White House on the 
economy, foreign affairs, social programs, immigration… Will the 
President-Elect actually do all the things he promised — or threatened — to do?

Last Thursday, sufficiently sobered up, a simple palliative presented itself: 
Forget everything Trump said during the campaign. Dwell, instead, on his most 
important goal: How do I get reelected? This is a man who doesn’t like to lose, 
and a one-term presidency would be the ultimate disgrace. He needs to put yet 
another Trump sign on a building, the White House this time.

Imagine a map of the US on Trump’s infamously messy desk:

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The states he swung into the red — Wisconsin, Iowa, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Florida 
— are clearly marked, as are his winning Electoral College numbers. The numbers 
for the popular vote, which Clinton won by a 0.47% margin — are less 
pronounced, but, for Trump, they must be galling. [Votes are still being 
counted, Hillary’s margin could approach 2M votes, 1.6%.]

This is what’s on his mind, his North Star. From now on, it occurred to me, 
everything he says and does will have one and only one aim: Trump 2020.

And what do we hear less than a week after Election Day? Parts of Obamacare are 
likely to be kept intact. The Wall at the Mexican border? Newt Gingrich, a key 
Trump ally, calls it a “great campaign device”, adding that Trump would 
probably have a hard time getting Mexico to pay for it.

We can be sure to see more “nuances” emerge as Inauguration Day approaches. 
What Trump said during the campaign was what he needed to say to get elected. 
That’s now void. As French politicians like to say, campaign promises only bind 
those who believe them. Let’s erase from our minds anything Trump said about 
taxes, building iPhones in the US, forcing Ford to bring Mexico production back 
to the US, Supreme Court Justices, trade wars, vetting Moslems, Defense 
spending…

>From now on, we only need this simple prism to look at what Trump says and 
>does: His 2020 reelection campaign. It has already started.

— [email protected]



Sent from my iPhone

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