01 March 2017
TRENDING

Gentler Rhetoric Does Not Gentler Policy or Fit POTUS Make. Don't Buy It.

Annette Niemtzow
Annette Niemtzow

Trump at Congress was no more "Presidential" than Trump has been for the last month - paddling around the White House in his bath robe, amplifying Fox lies and spewing #FakeNews, attacks on the press, and bigotry on Twitter, signing reprehensible and often unconstitutional Executive Orders and appointing appalling and unqualified cabinet members. Did I mention praising his playmate Putin?

His fictional portrait of America -- an America laden with crime and drugs, threatened by murderous immigrants and Muslim invaders -- has nothing to do with the America we know and love, nor are his solutions to his Dystopic vision what we need or want.

Our America has been making progress since the catastrophic economic meltdown the last Republican Admin brought us.

We stand ready to move forward against inequality and for inclusiveness of all types and toward gender and racial fairness, toward answers for the Environment, Climate Control, Gun and Terrorist violence, American and World Poverty, and against nuclear dangers (which now loom larger because of this man).

We want to build on, not tear down, the Affordable Care Act and improve, not hurt health care. We want healthy and delicious food on our tables.

We want economic stability and growth with opportunity for all. We want respect for and advances in Science and Civility in our nation. We want the arts to thrive.

We don't want a wall with Mexico. We do want a kind solution for undocumented immigrants and Dreamers.

We aspire to a fairer, gentler America.

We aspire high.

Despite Trump's assertion to the contrary, there has been NO "political uprising" that Trump and the GOP should capitalize on. Where is his acknowledgement that a point of view antithetical to his was the choice of 65.9 million voters, that his opponent led in the popular vote by more than 2.8 million voters, or that he is president only with the help of the Russians and FBI director Comey?

Take in what the new leader of the Democratic National Committee, Tom Perez tweeted last night.

@Tom Perez

Bottom line: Trump's #JointAddress was Steve Bannon on steroids with a smile.

Take in too the words of Glenn Thrush which follow, published New York Times Article, 5 Key Takeways from President Trump's Speech:

After five-plus weeks of gleefully setting the Washington establishment ablaze and declaring a new war with virtually every public utterance, Mr. Trump took the radical step on Tuesday night of delivering a soothing comfort food of an address to a jittery Congress and skeptical public.

For the first time since his swearing-in in January, Mr. Trump seemed to accept the fetters of formality and tradition that define and dignify the presidency.

And while he touched on all of the hard-edge elements of the economic nationalist agenda that has impelled his executive orders and calls for "revolution," Mr. Trump brandished a blunter rhetorical ax and, for once, delivered on his promise to speak the Reagan Republican dialect of optimism and reconciliation.

Why the sudden shift? Numbers. Mr. Trump's approval rating is the worst for any new president in recorded history — between 38 and 50 percent at a time when many presidents are in the 60s.

Slamming the news media or pro-Obamacare demonstrators energizes his base, but it's hard to move much higher in the polls without making a less partisan pitch.

The other key statistic spurring his sunshine-and-civility adjustment: $54 billion, the amount of federal funding he hopes to siphon from other departments to increase spending at the Pentagon — a budget proposal that is already half-dead on arrival, judging from its lukewarm reception on Capitol Hill this week.

Presidents, even those commanding comfortable majorities in both houses, need to get Congress in line, and the only way to do that is to declare peace.

Here are five takeaways from the most presidential speech Mr. Trump has ever given — delivered at precisely the moment he needed to project sobriety, seriousness of purpose and self-discipline.

Which Donald Trump is real?

The split-screen between Tuesday's temperate Mr. Trump and the everyday Mr. Trump was striking, to put it mildly.

"The time for trivial fights is over," said Mr. Trump, a man who spent the first 48 hours of his presidency bickering about the size of the inauguration crowd.

While that statement was meant as a challenge to his establishment critics, it also seemed as if he were coaching himself.

All of the previous big-stage speeches delivered by Mr. Trump, from his nomination address in Cleveland last summer to his 16-minute inaugural speech, had a gloomy, mourning-in-America quality.

His aides promised a Ronald Reagan-inspired invocation of America's future in the days leading up to his swearing-in. What he delivered, thanks to his speech-writing team of Stephen Miller and Stephen K. Bannon, was an invocation of "American carnage."

Since his swearing-in, Mr. Trump roved the airwaves and Twitter, lashing out at anyone who opposed him, and many people who didn't.

In just the past couple of weeks, the president has reiterated his description of some news outlets as "enemies of the American people," while taking his shots at Paris, Sweden, Hill Democrats, the F.B.I., government leakers, President Barack Obama and his own communications staff, among other targets.

But on Tuesday, the president rolled the dice, and went for nice. In style, if not substance, Mr. Trump delivered an address that nearly any of his Republican primary opponents — whom he once savaged as establishment stooges — might have delivered had they been standing at the rostrum.

"That torch is now in our hands," Mr. Trump said within the first few minutes of his speech, echoing, if not entirely approaching, the wispy mountaintop oratory of more polished predecessors like Mr. Obama and Mr. Reagan. "And we will use it to light up the world. I am here tonight to deliver a message of unity and strength, and it is a message deeply delivered from my heart."

Mr. Trump has made immense progress sticking to a script, but Wednesday is a new day, and the presidential Twitter finger gets itchy in the middle of the week.

The big question is whether his unifying tone represents the mythical, long-awaited pivot point — or was just part of a well-written speech efficiently delivered by a gifted politician learning his new trade.

A Swift Denunciation of Bigotry

Mr. Trump has been criticized for his sluggish response to violence and vandalism against Jews, blacks and Muslims during his presidency. But the opening words of his speech were dedicated to tolerance and inclusion.

"Recent threats targeting Jewish community centers and vandalism of Jewish cemeteries, as well as last week's shooting in Kansas City," he said, "remind us that while we may be a nation divided on policies, we are a country that stands united in condemning hate and evil in all of its very ugly forms."

Again, it's hard to say if his statement reflected a genuine change of approach.

Mr. Trump and some allies have suggested that recent bias-related episodes might be false-flag attempts by his opponents to embarrass him.

But his words were welcomed in the House chamber, greeted by some of the most sustained applause of the evening.

Spiking the football in the first quarter

The polls have not been especially kind to Mr. Trump lately, but there is one distinct bright spot: 56 percent of voters in a Politico/Morning Consult poll released on Tuesday said that Mr. Trump was following through on his campaign promises.This is no small matter for a president eager to prove he's no mere talker.

For all its messaging, personnel and operational struggles, Mr. Trump's team has relentlessly executed a branding strategy aimed at projecting the image of a man of action fighting against gridlocked and corrupt Washington elites. Every day, Mr. Trump appears before the cameras where he is shown doing stuff like signing executive orders or convening panels of business, labor or political leaders.

"It's been a little over a month since my inauguration, and I want to take this moment to update the nation on the progress I've made in keeping those promises," he said, taking an extended bow for saving jobs at several factories across the country, renegotiating defense contracts, scrapping the Trans-Pacific Partnership, green-lighting two new fuel pipelines and cracking down on illegal immigration and criminal foreigners.

Never mind that Mr. Obama, the man Mr. Trump says left him "a mess" to clean up, had accomplished much more at this point in his term — including the stimulus package and a gender pay-equity law.

For all his newfound civility and message discipline, Mr. Trump cares most about this takeaway — proving he is an effective president at a time when his administration is being portrayed in the media as short-handed, adrift and conflict-ridden.

A serious case of the vagues

The president's speech had admirable length (it clocked in at just over 60 minutes), the requisite number of ovations, about 90, and a succession of punchy pronouncements.

What it didn't have was very much of an explanation on how Mr. Trump plans to govern. There were hardly any details about his proposals on the big-ticket items that will most likely define his first term. That included his Obamacare repeal-and-replace pledge, his plan to overhaul the tax code, the big infrastructure package he's vowed to ram through, or even his plan to shovel $54 billion into the Defense Department.What's going on with immigration?

Cracking down on illegal immigration is the central pillar of Mr. Trump's election-winning popularity with white working-class voters, so much so that it was the subject of his most decisive action thus far as president: the bungled rollout of his executive order barring migrants from seven predominantly Muslim nations. But Mr. Trump and his team sent out some seriously mixed messages in the hours leading up to the address.

"We will soon begin the construction of a great, great wall along our southern border," Mr. Trump declared, to the delight of many Republicans in the hall, who gave him a hearty standing ovation.

But earlier, in a sit-down with some of the country's leading news anchors, the president seemed to soften his stance considerably, as he has done previously in private, suggesting that legal status be granted to millions of undocumented immigrants who have not committed serious crimes.

Immigration hard-liners, led by his attorney general, Jeff Sessions, have long considered such a stance "amnesty."Mr. Trump never brought up the topic again — and didn't touch on his prior reference to legalizing undocumented immigrants — raising questions about what position he'll stake out in negotiations with Congress.

Further, take this in too, from Paul Waldman, in an article from The Week.

Nevertheless, sprinkled throughout Trump's speech were nods at unity. "We must build bridges of cooperation and trust — not drive the wedge of disunity and division," he said. And near the speech's end: "We are one people, with one destiny. We all bleed the same blood. We all salute the same flag. And we are all made by the same God." And he asked for everyone to join hands in service of the goal of repealing the Affordable Care Act: "On this and so many other things, Democrats and Republicans should get together and unite for the good of our country, and for the good of the American people."

Yet alongside those approving words about common purpose and identity were the usual Trumpian notes of division, fear, and dismissal of those who don't already support him. It was almost as if two different speeches had been merged together.

Trump talked about the election as if only his voters went to the polls, tossing in an awkward mixed metaphor: "Finally, the chorus became an earthquake — and the people turned out by the tens of millions, and they were all united by one very simple, but crucial demand, that America must put its own citizens first." The majority of voters who chose someone else probably responded, "Wait — what?" He described a fictitious crime wave, and pledged to "dismantle the criminal cartels that have spread across our nation." And he touted his new Victims Of Immigration Crime Engagement office, which he established for the purpose of tallying and publicizing crimes committed by undocumented immigrants.

Think for a moment about what a vile notion that is. Imagine if it was the Victims of Black Crime Engagement or the Victims of Jewish Crime Engagement, and you realize that its only purpose is to spread hatred and fear.

That's the real Trump administration in action, and it's the kind of place Trump's heart lies. He may have managed to act almost presidential for an hour, but there can be few Americans left who think that Trump really wants to bring us all together. And just wait — within a matter of hours he'll be back on Twitter, and back to his true self.

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March 1, 2017

Addendum. Don't believe Trump on women's health, women entrepreneurs, or most of all on Ryan Owen's death, which he exploited. Remember (as Voices4Hillary posted earlier in the week) that Ryan's father refused to meet with Trump. Much has been written about the fiasco in Yemen that resulted in Ryan Owen's death and in the deaths of many others as well. Trump lies. People die.

See links on this below.


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