People say they want change.
Politicians promise it.
Barack Obama offered change “we can
believe in,” for fear of leaving the false impression that he meant
to alter America democracy.
Donald Trump offered change by making
proposals that broke with traditional policies. It’s possible that
he means to alter American democracy.
Even if many, or even most, people want
change, they say they also want it to be bipartisan and carried out
peacefully. But these days political change seems to cause chaos.
Perhaps what people want – change without chaos – is impossible.
To further complicate the equation,
there needs to be some political continuity. Bringing broad change
rapidly may produce clean breaks from the past. But previous policy
produced some positive results.
Even more important, by recognizing the
need for continuity, government can reassure foreign allies and give
business the predictability essential for investing and planning.
Despite these considerations, the Trump
administration has reduced the formula to its simplest terms. Change
equals chaos.
Perhaps the prime reason for pushing
change without considering the ensuing confusion is that Trump
promised major changes and believes that such promises won him the
White House.
Surprising even himself by winning, he wants to stick
with the formula that seems to have worked.
Also, the president’s main focus is
himself, so many of his tweeted actions are launched more for their
immediate public effect than for their impact, especially long term.
In fact, his aides often seem to be chasing after his tweets to deal
with the impacts not taken into account.
To be fair, Trump promised change.
Many voters, including some of his supporters, thought he would
mellow when he learned the difficult political and diplomatic
balancing acts that go along with high office. Trump would become a
more conventional president. Instead, he stuck to many of his
promises.
When observers express surprise at the
loyalty of his “core” voters, they may miss the appeal of keeping
promises, no matter what they were or their unsuspected implications.
For them, Trump may be entirely different from traditional
politicians and that, more than policies, is what they want.
Among the problems of governing the way
he does is that policy is developed on the fly. Trump reacts to his
instincts without talking with advisors. In fact, the high turnover
in top administration jobs leaves him with only the most loyal not
necessarily the most savvy.
Recently, he launched a trade war with
China, ignoring its effect on U.S. consumer prices. He had
previously kept his promise to quit the Trans-Pacific Partnership,
which he saw only as a bad trade deal rather than as an attempt to
encircle China together with a dozen other countries.
He took great credit for a soaring
stock market, but failed to recognize that his protectionist trade
policy and attacks on Amazon would bring it down.
Trump gets a lot of his policy ideas
from Fox News. He likes the outlet because it praises him. It lauds
him because he follows Fox’s policy proposals, often based on false
data.
One place where Trump’s desire for
change has run into some reality is his relationship with Congress.
At first, he seemed to believe that his surprise victory should cause
Congress to fall in line behind him. He missed the fact the
legislators also have real powers, especially when both parties can
agree.
That’s what happened with the
government spending bill. The parties engaged in horse-trading, but
avoided paying the full bill for Trump’s wall, which Mexico was
supposed to finance. The president was furious, but bipartisan
majorities left him no choice but to sign.
Because of his refusal to learn on the
job, it’s likely only two major bills will have passed in the first
two years of solid GOP rule – the tax cut and the spending bill.
If the Democrats gain this fall, even less will happen before the
next presidential election in two years.
Maine echoes Washington. Referendum
voters decide to accept federal Medicaid expansion. Gov. LePage
creates chaos by refusing to allow it. He continues to believe that
he is above mere democracy. Ignoring the law, he closed the prison
facility in Washington County. A judge made him reverse course.
With his term ending, LePage won’t
learn how to govern in the time left. With two years left in his
term, Trump won’t learn how to govern, because of his personal
limitations.
Both are right that change is needed.
Change requires courage, to be sure, but also some wisdom to keep the
chaos under control.
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