Most of the talk about yesterday’s anonymous
New York Times op-ed in which an author purported to be a senior official
in the Trump Administration focuses on the author of the piece. The bigger
issue is that the unnamed author confirms a large number of reports from inside the Trump Administration over the
past two years.
The author of the piece said that “President Trump’s
impulses are generally anti-trade and anti-democratic” and “erratic,” and claimed
that a cabal of the president’s advisors is
working to “insulate their operations from his whims.”
The sheer volume of similar reports lends credence to the
claims in the anonymous piece. The op-ed comes on the heels of blurbs from Bob
Woodward’s new book. Among the juicer quotes is one attributed to John
Kelly in which the chief of staff reportedly called the president an “idiot.”
Although Kelly denied the remark, it is very similar to an alleged comment by
former Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson who was reported to have called the president a “moron” last
year.
It would take many pages to make an exhaustive list of all
the disturbing pictures painted of Donald Trump. Suffice it to say that the
president’s public actions also lend credence to the anonymous sources. One of
the president’s most recent overreactions was to suggest on Twitter
that the author the op-ed was guilty of treason.
Whoever the author is, the claim that insiders are slowing
the president’s more disastrous impulses rings true. As James Freeman of the Wall
Street Journal asks, in light of the positive Trump economy, “Could it be
that Donald Trump is not as crazy and ignorant as Mr. Woodward and his media
brethren would have us believe?” The answer in the op-ed has long been my
suspicion.
President Trump has been moderately successful despite his
actions and not because of them. The best thing about the Trump Administration
was that it did install a number of small government conservatives who enacted
deregulation and tax reform in Mr. Trump’s name while attempting to limit his destructive
impulses. In some cases, such as his “reset” with Russia and his pivot toward gun
control, they were successful. In the case of tariffs and his war on the media,
they were not.
Contrary to what President Trump and his supporters say, this
secret resistance is not undermining his presidency. It is attempting to save
it.
And my guess for the author of the piece? If it isn’t a
low-level aide, I’d lay odds on Mike Pompeo. Pompeo has been with the Administration
from the beginning, first as CIA director and then as Secretary of State. The foreign policy side is where Trump has been more
erratic and unable to be checked by Congress. Pompeo would have had to deal
with that first-hand.
The piece may well be a hoax, but the White House resistance
is almost certainly real.
Originally published
in The
Resurgent
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