Donald Trump Thinks He Can Fix His Presidency With a New Communications Team, Is Deluded – Slate Magazine

Posted: June 1, 2017 at 11:08 pm

Donald Trump and Jared Kushner arrive for a meeting at the White House on Feb. 23.

Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

President Trump is deeply unpopular. His foreign triphis first such visit to Americas allies abroadwas marked by turbulence, ending in a spat with Germany. His legislative agenda has largely stalled, with little movement on either tax reform or his health care bill. His budget, released last week, was widely condemned and criticized, and hes facing a potential battle over the debt ceiling.

Jamelle Bouie isSlates chief political correspondent.

Adding to the omnishambles is scandal. The investigation into the ties between Russia and his campaign has ensnared his son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner, who allegedly proposed a secret communications channel with Moscow, located within the Russian embassy in Washington. In terms of Trump figures who are under the most serious scrutiny, Kushner seems to have surpassed former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, who resigned his position over his ties to the Turkish and Russian governments and who is a subject of the FBIs inquiry into the Trump campaign. None of this even touches the crises of Trumps own making, like his firing of now former FBI Director James Comey after having allegedly instructed him to drop the investigation into Flynnan overt effort to stop the Russia inquiry that appears very clearly to have been an attempt to obstruct justice.

Until and unless the special counsel investigation of Robert Mueller yields legally actionable fruit beyond press leaks, these problems are politically surmountable. That would, however, require focus, humility, and a willingness to change course. In this White House, those qualities are in short supply. Indeed, there's no evidencefrom either his life or political careerthat Trump has the self-knowledge or discipline needed to turn his presidency around. Which is why, in the face of this storm, Trumps solution is typically superficialthe president wants better PR. Rather than displace or remove the largely amateur advisers and confidants that have enabled his worst impulses, Trump will try, instead, to sell himself harder.

Trump is ignorant, erratic, and largely disinterested in the details of governance.

To that end, the president plans a media staff shake-up, which began on Tuesday with the resignation of his communications director, Michael Dubke, after just three months in the position. The Washington Post reports that Dubke, along with press secretary Sean Spicer, have been under sharp criticism from Trump and many senior officials in the West Wing, who believe the president has been poorly served by his staff, in particular in the aftermath of the Comey firing.

The thinking, then, is that a stronger communications staffled, perhaps, by former campaign aides Corey Lewandowski and David Bossiecould better defend the president and advance his priorities in the face of criticism and scandal. If these crises were superficialquestions of appearance and rhetoricthat approach might work. But Trumps problems are deep-seated and substantive. The president ultimately wont be able to rebut Russia allegations with sharp tweets and an aggressive war room, not when he faces an independent FBI and general counsel investigation. A better sales job also wont improve his legislative prospects, not when Americans have turned decisively against bills like the American Health Care Act. Just 8 percent of Americans want the Senate to pass the House version of the bill, 29 percent want the Senate to reject it outright, and 26 percent want major changes, according to the latest poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation.

Top Comment

OK. You've really pushed my misusage buttons now: "Trump is ignorant, erratic, and largely disinterested in the details of governance." This is the exactly wrong usage of "disinterested". Trump is uninterestedin the details of governance. More...

Above all, a communications shake-up does little for Trumps actual problem, his temperament. Trump is ignorant, erratic, and largely disinterested in the details of governance. His contempt for the truth, domineering instincts, and preoccupation with loyalty are authoritarian-minded and ill-suited to a fundamentally democratic office, whose power depends on cooperating with other parts of government as much as it rests on its formal authority as articulated in the Constitution. Even if Trump really were the businessman he claims to beeven if he had actual success in building things, rather than the image of success promoted through savvy branding and reality televisionhe would be in over his head at the White House.

As it stands, Trump is a man of few skills and worse instincts, whose political problems are largely of his own making and who lacks the self-knowledge to correct the course of his flagging administration. Nothing except a clean and competent administration might be able to change his popularity, which has flagged since the start of this administration. All the spice in the world cant mask the taste of spoiled meat.

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Donald Trump Thinks He Can Fix His Presidency With a New Communications Team, Is Deluded - Slate Magazine

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