It has taken a good deal longer than it should have,
but Americans have now seen the con-man behind the curtain.
GUEST BLOG / Peter Wehner, Contributing writer at The
Atlantic and senior fellow at EPPC--When,
in January 2016, I wrote that despite being a lifelong Republican who worked in
the previous three GOP administrations, I would never vote for Donald Trump,
even though his administration would align much more with my policy views than
a Hillary Clinton presidency would, a lot of my Republican friends were
befuddled. How could I not vote for a person who checked far more of my policy
boxes than his opponent?
From theatlantic.com/latest/
What I explained then, and
what I have said many times since, is that Trump is fundamentally
unfit—intellectually, morally, temperamentally, and psychologically—for office.
For me, that is the paramount consideration in electing a president, in part
because at some point it’s reasonable to expect that a president will face an
unexpected crisis—and at that point, the president’s judgment and discernment,
his character and leadership ability, will really matter.
David Frum: The worst
outcome
“Mr. Trump has no desire to
acquaint himself with most issues, let alone master them” is how I put it four
years ago. “No major presidential candidate has ever been quite as disdainful
of knowledge, as indifferent to facts, as untroubled by his benightedness.” I
added this:
Mr. Trump’s virulent
combination of ignorance, emotional instability, demagogy, solipsism and
vindictiveness would do more than result in a failed presidency; it could very
well lead to national catastrophe. The prospect of Donald Trump as commander in
chief should send a chill down the spine of every American.
We knew it then: Spring 2016 |
To be sure, the president
isn’t responsible for either the coronavirus or the disease it causes,
COVID-19, and he couldn’t have stopped it from hitting our shores even if he
had done everything right. Nor is it the case that the president hasn’t done
anything right; in fact, his decision to implement a travel ban on China was
prudent. And any narrative that attempts to pin all of the blame on Trump for
the coronavirus is simply unfair. The temptation among the president’s critics
to use the pandemic to get back at Trump for every bad thing he’s done should
be resisted, and schadenfreude is never a good look.
That said, the president and
his administration are responsible for grave, costly errors, most especially
the epic manufacturing failures in diagnostic testing, the decision to test too
few people, the delay in expanding testing to labs outside the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, and problems in the supply chain. These
mistakes have left us blind and badly behind the curve, and, for a few crucial
weeks, they created a false sense of security. What we now know is that the
coronavirus silently spread for several weeks, without us being aware of it and
while we were doing nothing to stop it. Containment and mitigation efforts
could have significantly slowed its spread at an early, critical point, but we
frittered away that opportunity.
“They’ve simply lost time
they can’t make up. You can’t get back six weeks of blindness,” Jeremy
Konyndyk, who helped oversee the international response to Ebola during the
Obama administration and is a senior policy fellow at the Center for Global
Development, told The Washington Post. “To the extent that there’s someone to
blame here, the blame is on poor, chaotic management from the White House and
failure to acknowledge the big picture.”
Ben Rhodes: How Trump
designed his White House to fail
Earlier this week, Anthony
Fauci, the widely respected director of the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases whose reputation for honesty and integrity have been only
enhanced during this crisis, admitted in congressional testimony that the
United States is still not providing adequate testing for the coronavirus. “It
is failing. Let’s admit it.” He added, “The idea of anybody getting [testing]
easily, the way people in other countries are doing it, we’re not set up for
that. I think it should be, but we’re not."
We also know the World
Health Organization had working tests that the United States refused, and
researchers at a project in Seattle tried to conduct early tests for the
coronavirus but were prevented from doing so by federal officials. (Doctors at
the research project eventually decided to perform coronavirus tests without
federal approval.)
But that’s not all. The
president reportedly ignored early warnings of the severity of the virus and
grew angry at a CDC official who in February warned that an outbreak was
inevitable. The Trump administration dismantled the National Security Council’s
global-health office, whose purpose was to address global pandemics; we’re now
paying the price for that. “We worked very well with that office,” Fauci told
Congress. “It would be nice if the office was still there.” We may face a
shortage of ventilators and medical supplies, and hospitals may soon be
overwhelmed, certainly if the number of coronavirus cases increases at a rate
anything like that in countries such as Italy. (This would cause not only
needless coronavirus-related deaths, but deaths from those suffering from other
ailments who won’t have ready access to hospital care.)
Yascha Mounk: The extraordinary
decisions facing Italian doctors
Some of these mistakes are
less serious and more understandable than others. One has to take into account
that in government, when people are forced to make important decisions based on
incomplete information in a compressed period of time, things go wrong.
Yet in some respects, the
avalanche of false information from the president has been most alarming of
all. It’s been one rock slide after another, the likes of which we have never
seen. Day after day after day he brazenly denied reality, in an effort to blunt
the economic and political harm he faced. But Trump is in the process of
discovering that he can’t spin or tweet his way out of a pandemic. There is no
one who can do to the coronavirus what Attorney General William Barr did to the
Mueller report: lie about it and get away with it.
The president’s
misinformation and mendacity about the coronavirus are head-snapping. He
claimed that it was contained in America when it was actually spreading. He
claimed that we had “shut it down” when we had not. He claimed that testing was
available when it wasn’t. He claimed that the coronavirus will one day
disappear “like a miracle”; it won’t. He claimed that a vaccine would be
available in months; Fauci says it will not be available for a year or more.
Trump falsely blamed the
Obama administration for impeding coronavirus testing. He stated that the
coronavirus first hit the United States later than it actually did. (He said
that it was three weeks prior to the point at which he spoke; the actual figure
was twice that.) The president claimed that the number of cases in Italy was
getting “much better” when it was getting much worse. And in one of the more
stunning statements an American president has ever made, Trump admitted that
his preference was to keep a cruise ship off the California coast rather than
allowing it to dock, because he wanted to keep the number of reported cases of
the coronavirus artificially low.
“I like the numbers,” Trump
said. “I would rather have the numbers stay where they are. But if they want to
take them off, they’ll take them off. But if that happens, all of a sudden your
240 [cases] is obviously going to be a much higher number, and probably the 11
[deaths] will be a higher number too.” (Cooler heads prevailed, and over the
president’s objections, the Grand Princess was allowed to dock at the Port of
Oakland.)
On and on it goes.
To make matters worse, the
president delivered an Oval Office address that was meant to reassure the
nation and the markets but instead shook both. The president’s delivery was
awkward and stilted; worse, at several points, the president, who decided to ad-lib
the teleprompter speech, misstated his administration’s own policies, which the
administration had to correct. Stock futures plunged even as the president was
still delivering his speech. In his address, the president called for Americans
to “unify together as one nation and one family,” despite having referred to
Washington Governor Jay Inslee as a “snake” days before the speech and
attacking Democrats the morning after it. As The Washington Post’s Dan Balz put
it, “Almost everything that could have gone wrong with the speech did go
wrong.”
Read: You’re likely to get
the coronavirus
Taken together, this is a
massive failure in leadership that stems from a massive defect in character.
Trump is such a habitual liar that he is incapable of being honest, even when
being honest would serve his interests. He is so impulsive, shortsighted, and
undisciplined that he is unable to plan or even think beyond the moment. He is
such a divisive and polarizing figure that he long ago lost the ability to
unite the nation under any circumstances and for any cause. And he is so
narcissistic and unreflective that he is completely incapable of learning from
his mistakes. The president’s disordered personality makes him as ill-equipped
to deal with a crisis as any president has ever been. With few exceptions, what
Trump has said is not just useless; it is downright injurious.
The nation is recognizing
this, treating him as a bystander “as school superintendents, sports
commissioners, college presidents, governors and business owners across the
country take it upon themselves to shut down much of American life without
clear guidance from the president,” in the words of Peter Baker and Maggie
Haberman of The New York Times.
Donald Trump is shrinking
before our eyes.
The coronavirus is quite
likely to be the Trump presidency’s inflection point, when everything changed,
when the bluster and ignorance and shallowness of America’s 45th president
became undeniable, an empirical reality, as indisputable as the laws of science
or a mathematical equation.
It has taken a good deal
longer than it should have, but Americans have now seen the con man behind the
curtain. The president, enraged for having been unmasked, will become more
desperate, more embittered, more unhinged. He knows nothing will be the same.
His administration may stagger on, but it will be only a hollow shell. The
Trump presidency is over.
PETER WEHNER is a contributing writer at The
Atlantic, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, and Egan
visiting professor at Duke University. He writes widely on political, cultural,
religious, and national-security issues, and he is the author of The Death of
Politics: How to Heal Our Frayed Republic After Trump.
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