(ThyBlackMan.com) #45 Trump got one thing right about the media hyped first 100 days measuring stick of a new president. It’s a silly measure. In fact, presidents from John F. Kennedy to Obama have derided the 100-day fetish and correctly noted that the far better to gauge how effective or bumbling an incoming president is the first 1000 days. A quick look at the presidency of Clinton and Bush is enough to prove that. Clinton bombed badly in pushing Congress for a $16 billion stimulus package; he bungled the don’t ask, don’t tell policy regarding gays in the military, and got the first flack on his health care reform plan. Yet, the Clinton presidency is regarded as one of the most successful, popular and enduring in modern times.
Then there’s the Bush presidency. He got off to a fast start. At the 100-day mark in April 2001, his approval ratings matched Obama’s. He was widely applauded for his trillion-dollar tax cutting program, his “Faith-Based” and disabled Americans Initiatives, and for talking up education, health care reform and slashing the national debt. But aside from the momentary adulation he got after the 9/11 terror attack his presidency is rated as one of the worst in modern times.
But while Donald Trump, like Kennedy and Obama, got it right in ridiculing the 100-day time span as being way too short to call a new presidential administration a success or failure, it’s not too short a period to call his White House stint the worst 100 days ever. It’s not his consistent bottom wallowing popularity rating that tags his administration the worst first time start ever. It’s not even his record of non-accomplishment which amounts to a slew of inconsequential executive orders that mostly attempt to torpedo some of Obama’s executive orders, and his disastrous, court derailed Muslim immigrant ban. It’s the utter lack of any hint that things will get any better during his next 100, or even 1000 days in the White House.
The tip offs of his future cluelessness are everywhere. He’s the least politically equipped winning presidential candidate to ever sit behind the desk in the Oval Office. Now that was the great asset that got him elected since so many Americans were supposedly so fed up with the insular, corrupt, deal making, corporate dominated, politics of Beltway Washington. Trump was supposedly the remedy for that. This delusion should have been shattered with the parade of Goldman Sachs tied, Pentagon connected generals, and Trump corporate cronies that he plopped into his cabinet and top staff positions. This could only mean one thing, the corporate and political regulars that Donald Trump pretended to sneer at would do what they always do and that’s run the government show for him, as they have for other GOP presidents.
The flop on the repeal of the Affordable Care Act and the polarizing vote on his Supreme Court pick Neil Gorsuch did two seemingly impossible things. It turned off legions of hard right GOP House conservatives and moderate Senate Democrats who had made some soundings about trying to work out an accommodation with Trump on some legislative and policy issues. The future here is going to be one of never-ending, time consuming, get nothing done rancor and in-fighting between Trump and Congress.
The Russia election meddling scandal, Donald Trump’s refusal to disclose his taxes, and his dubious conflict of interest business dealings insure that the screams for congressional investigations will only get louder in the days and months to come. This will continue to keep the tens of millions who want Trump bounced from office revved up. They’ll continue to turn up at GOP and Democratic congresspersons town halls and shout them down on any defense they try to make of Trump’s policies and actions.
Donald Trump’s weak defense against prolonged and guaranteed failure is to toss a few missiles or drop a bomb every now and then or saber rattle the usual suspect villains, ISIS, Assad, the Taliban, and the North Koreans. The media will run with this for a time, and some commentators who should know better will even call his acts forceful and presidential. This will wipe his political and legislative flops off the front page for a day or so, and give him a point or two bump up in the polls. But even here, he can only go to the well so often with the military tough guy act before this starts to wear thin, and some begin to catch on to his wag the dog game.
The 1000-day mark that Obama, Kennedy and other presidents cited as the more realistic time frame is not an arbitrary number. That marks the near end of a president’s first White House term. The honeymoon is over, and the president has fought major battles over his policies, initiatives, executive orders, court appointments and programs with Congress, the courts, interest groups and the media. Battles that by then have been won or lost, or fought to a draw, and there’s enough time to gauge their impact and the president’s effectiveness. In Donald Trump’s case, it won’t matter. His first 1000 days will be like his first 100, the worst presidency ever.
Written By Earl Ofari Hutchinson
One can find more info about Mr. Hutchinson over at the following site; TheHutchinson ReportNews.
Also feel free to connect with him through twitter; http://twitter.com/earlhutchins
He is also an associate editor of New America Media. His forthcoming book is From King to Obama: Witness to a Turbulent History (Middle Passage Press).
This Writer Should Know Better!
What a poor and merciless discourse on Mr. Trump and his administration. It totally disregards why so many Americans voted for Mr. Trump and this article speaks to the heart of why Mr. Trump was elected in the first place and why Democrats lost. There is no mention in this article of the miserable economic state of Black America and its 18% unemployment rate. No mention of $10.00 an hour wages having proven not to be enough to support a normal standard of living for struggling families. There is no mention of how illegal immigration has had a negative economic affect in some areas of country, where in some instants depressed wages having been the result. These are some of the everyday problems not only Black America is facing but America as a whole. These are problems Democrats during their presidential run to the White House did not address and Donald Trump hammered and talked about these issues everyday on the campaign trail. This writer who ridicules Mr. Trump in this article fails us as a race. A more appropriate article and one that would be helpful to us as African Americans would be show how Mr. Trump is doing on the issues that affect us economically, like the unfair trade policies of many countries which result in many good paying jobs being transferred to other countries. You see, good paying jobs are not white, black or brown as they have no color. At the end of the day, the more good paying jobs available in this country benefits us as group as we have the highest unemployment rate of any worker group.
It appears Mr. Trump is taking a hard line on trade that results in many jobs being transferred to other countries. For the first time in a long time, the subject of reciprocal trade is being put on the table. The issue of reciprocal trade has to do with countries like, China, Germany, Mexico, and Japan, who run large consistent trade deficits (that is selling more to us than what they buy from us) with the United States opening their country’s borders to more American goods. Selling more goods to other countries grows the U. S. economy and creates more jobs. Even swap ain’t no swindle when it comes to trading with other countries.
We need more African American writers who will sit down and explain these type issues to us. In other words, how is Trump doing on issues that affect us directly. What is his report card on these issues. We need less political rhetoric which is what this writer is feeding us and to some extent what the Democratic Party and traditional Republicans have also fed us, as many of us are more intelligent apparently than this writer realizes. You see at the end of day, I am not a Trump lover, hater or promoter, but I am for progress when it comes to the African American community.