Tumult surrounds Trump days ahead of his presidency
Donald Trump is four days away from assuming the presidency after one of the most tumultuous transitions in modern history, setting the stage for a rocky period of dramatic change, partisan acrimony and unpredictable results.
Trump will take office
with far lower poll ratings than his recent predecessors, with
majorities of Americans doubtful of his capacity to handle the job. He's
at war with the nation's intelligence agencies, has a dysfunctional relationship with the press, is fighting claims that he's too cozy with Russia and is brushing off conventional ethical standards for an incoming president. China has warned him about changing policy related to Taiwan and Mexico has threatened retaliation if Trump imposes a border tax.
John Lewis became one of the most prominent Democrats to call the legitimacy of Trump's presidency into question, prompting a weekend retort from the President-elect, who tweeted that the civil rights icon is "all talk" and "no action."
For any other incoming
president, such a pile of controversies and crises would suggest an
early political disaster is imminent for the new White House. But Trump
broke the mold in his outsider campaign and has repeatedly shrugged off
scandals and controversies that would have downed normal politicians. He
appears determined to shake up conventions that have built up around
the presidency for two centuries and has little time for those who say
he lacks presidential demeanor.
In
fact, many of the political storms raging as he takes office have been
instigated by Trump himself. Inciting chaos and disruption has been the
key to his political career, helping him rupture the Republican
establishment and win the White House. He seemingly has no plans to
change tactics in the White House.
"He is reinventing the modern presidency," said Timothy Naftali, a CNN presidential historian.
But
as Trump takes office, his signature style, designed to keep everyone
off balance, is facing its most significant test. Will his
confrontational, brazen approach, the prosecution of personal grudges on
social media and tendency to stir disorientation prove to be a workable
template for a presidency? And will his method of deliberately picking
at societal fault lines work when Trump is president of all Americans?
Metrics for success
"Only
time will tell whether he succeeds as a leader," said Naftali, who also
teaches at New York University and warns that while Trump often plays
by different rules, history will not. "We know the metrics for success
haven't changed -- public opinion, bills passed, confidence around the
world, confidence at home, a strong economy. All these things are the
same metrics."
Trump, he continued,
"is reinventing the style of the presidency and every president has the
right to do that. But he's going to be tested the same way."
Trump will begin his administration in a deepening hole with public opinion.
His
approval rating stood at 44% a week before the inauguration, according
to Gallup. President Barack Obama was at 83% at the equivalent moment,
George W. Bush was at 61% and Bill Clinton at 68%.
A
Pew Research poll found that 39% of Americans approve of the way Trump
has outlined his policies while a Quinnipiac poll put his approval
rating at 37% last week.
Gallup
also found Trump under 50% on questions about whether he will handle
military force wisely, how he would steer an international crisis and on
his capacity to avoid major scandals in his administration. He does
better over his ability to handle the economy and defend US interests
abroad, but he still lags other previous incoming presidents at the
equivalent time.
Vice
President-elect Mike Pence, however, said Trump has a mandate even as
Democrats point out he lost the popular vote and question the legitimacy
of his victory.
"Donald Trump won a
landslide election," Pence said Sunday on CBS' "Face the Nation." "The
American people spoke decisively, they wanted change and I promise ...
come noon this coming Friday, change really begins and we are going to
make America great again."
Starting
from such a low base of approval gives Trump little leeway should
things begin to go wrong in his administration. Presidents who get into
trouble in the polls generally become less effective in molding public
opinion in times of crisis and in exerting leverage on Capitol Hill.
It's
also notable that while Trump took care to keep his supporters on his
side during his post-election "thank you" tour, he's done almost nothing
to reach out to the millions of Americans who view his inauguration
with anxiety.
He has instead spent
his transition waging personal vendettas on Twitter, castigating CNN and
other media organizations while putting more credibility in the
statements of Russia and Wikileaks founder Julian Assange than those of
US intelligence agencies.
Senate probe into election hacking to review possible links between Russia, campaigns
But
if Trump proves skillful at handling the presidency, it's possible his
approval rating could quickly rise. And for Trump's supporters, who sent
him to Washington to fundamentally dismantle the political class, blasting Meryl Streep on
Twitter, slamming journalists, defying the intelligence establishment
and ignoring conventions on avoiding conflicts of interests is not
troubling at all.
Future problems?
Still, the President-elect could be storing up future problems that could return and haunt him later in his administration.
Ethics
lawyers have condemned his decision to flout the normal practice of
presidents by not putting his assets in a blind trust as far short of
what is necessary. Trump will hand over the running of his businesses to
his sons, Eric and Donald Jr., and has pledged not to discuss them. But
he will retain his financial stake, which means he can still boost his
own wealth indirectly by decisions he will make as President.
The President-elect will also take office beset by looming political challenges in Congress.
Trump said at last week's news conference that Obamacare should be repealed and replaced nearly simultaneously,
a sentiment that House Speaker Paul Ryan seemed to endorse at a CNN
town hall. But no workable plan has emerged that could pass Congress and
insure millions of people who will lose coverage if Obamacare is
dismantled.
Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell is calling for a "stable transition period" between the
two moving parts of building a new GOP health care plan and several
Republican senators are anxious about moving too quickly.
Trump vs. his Cabinet
Disagreements
are also brewing at the heart of Trump's own cabinet. While most of his
nominees appear to be heading for confirmation, clear differences
emerged between the President-elect and his national security team at
their hearings on Russia, torture, the Iran nuclear deal and the need to
preserve US alliances.
Their
positions raised questions about how their conventional views would fit
with a president who seems intent on disrupting foreign policy
traditions. Trump tweeted on Friday that there was no reason to worry.
"All
of my Cabinet nominee are looking good and doing a great job. I want
them to be themselves and express their own thoughts, not mine!"
Traditionally,
new presidents begin their administrations by using their inaugural
address to call on the nation to unite after fractious political
campaigns. Trump may do the same, though his scorched earth style leaves
him with perhaps a bigger challenge in this area than any recent
president. His handling of lingering questions about the extent of
Russian interference in the election and the treatment of Hillary
Clinton by the FBI could also be crucial to establishing credibility
with those who oppose him.
For now,
however, he remains hyper sensitive to the merest suggestion that his
election victory was marred by outside influences, suggesting that
corrosive questions about 2016 will linger long into his presidency
"What
are Hillary Clinton's people complaining about with respect to the
F.B.I. Based on the information they had she should never..... have been
allowed to run — guilty as hell," Trump said in consecutive tweets on
Friday.
FBI Director Comey's political firestorm, explained
Former Clinton spokesman Brian Fallon said on CNN last week that such comments bode ill for Trump's presidency.
"I
think those tweets are just the latest indication that Donald Trump is
someone very insecure in his victory," he said last week. "Every day,
there are new developments and new shoes dropping, so to speak, that
call into question legitimacy the of his win."
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