Most
people know the 2018 Winter Olympics will soon begin. Few will know
the difference between the two men’s 1500-meter speed skating gold
medals.
Who
cares? What’s important is what country wins medals and who wins
the most. That’s one number many people will know.
They
care about the medal count. If the U.S. does well, it will be a
source of pride. And it may send a message about America’s leading
role in the world. That’s why countries like Russia and, in the
past, East Germany have cheated in the Olympics. They hope the
results will enhance their prestige.
Appearances
matter. How well a country does in speed skating says nothing about
its place in the world, but some people believe medal count does.
Russia, banned from this year’s Olympics, thought it could steal
its way back to major power status.
Even
more importantly, the prestige and respect for a country depends on
the conduct of its leaders. When the president of the United States
prefers barroom jibes to statesmanship, he costs the country the
respect of both its own citizens and people across the world.
President
Trump’s appeal for his so-called “core constituency” is
supposedly based on his saying publicly what they think and may
express only in bars or locker rooms. They may be entitled to feel
that one of their own is now in power.
Add
to that, congressional Republicans who support his denial of having
used racist language, despite Trump’s poor record of truth telling.
They
see him as a GOP president who is their conduit for passing their
conservative program. He fails to lead and lacks a program of his
own. The unsuccessful repeal of the ACA and the tax overhaul bill
both came from congressional Republicans, not the White House.
Trump
was glad to take personal credit for both legislative moves. So long
as they control Congress and have an accommodating president, some
right wing Republicans will forgive or ignore any tweets or White
House outbursts.
We
like to believe that the U.S. president, even after a highly partisan
campaign, represents all Americans. But Trump remains faithful to
his core and disdains the rest of the country, even though the
majority did not support him.
Some
congressional Republicans feel so strongly about their views that
they are uncompromising. They spurn any cooperation with Democrats.
They know this year’s elections could weaken their grip on
government, so they will play hardball now and count on Trump to back
them.
As
part of his plan to pick up needed Democratic support in the Senate,
Trump wants to resort to tactics consistent with his deal making in
New York City real estate. For example, he wants to bring back
“earmarks.”
Earmarks
were tacked onto other legislation and provided tax-supported local
projects designed for specific members of Congress. They ran into
billions of dollars and were mostly eliminated by an embarrassed
Congress.
But
Trump seems to think he can buy Democratic votes by offering them
earmarks. They would be financed by taxpayers, running up the
deficit. The price we would pay is worth it, if Trump could pick up
a rare legislative victory.
He
demands Democratic support for his border wall (wasn’t Mexico
supposed to pay for it?) by insisting on it as a condition for
helping for DACA immigrants brought here as young kids decades ago.
Obviously, he badly wants to notch a political victory on his border
wall promise.
Trump’s
anti-immigrant tactics appeal to his core, but the constituencies
that voted for him are shrinking. His GOP allies support him for the
party’s 2020 nomination, because they will stick with their
incumbent president.
If
the polls are even faintly right, he has no chance of reelection,
provided the Democrats put up a decent candidate. He will probably
be challenged for the GOP nomination, ripping the party apart. If a
Romney or a Rubio tries again, the challenger could get the
nomination. The GOP better get all they can from Trump now.
The
worst part of Trump’s loose language about immigrants from
countries whose inhabitants are not predominantly white is that he
has made more Americans fearful of their government. If you are
member of a group Trump doesn’t like, you may worry about actions
by him and his compliant supporters.
South
Carolina GOP Sen. Lindsay Graham was at the meeting where Trump
unloaded on immigration from Haiti and Africa. He objected,
answering that this country is defined by its ideals, which do not
support discrimination based on national origin.
Trump
probably did not understand.