Editorial: Donald Trump’s Opportunity to Show Up as President Has Passed

Donald Trump has failed this country over and over in the past 3 1/2 years, but the murder by police last week of George Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, along with the nation’s ensuing distress, offered Trump another opportunity to show up as president. Alas, Trump once again chose not to accept the opportunity.
Racism has always thrived in the United States. Donald Trump didn’t start it, and though he can’t singlehandedly stop it, either, he has a powerful platform from which he could condemn the systemic racism that infiltrates American institutions, and that has led to the brutality and murder of so many people of color, including George Floyd.
We’ve all witnessed how Donald Trump’s base hangs on his every word and places their trust in him, despite his cheating in business, cheating on his wife, degrading women, making fun of disabled people, telling more than 18,000 lies while in office (as documented by The Washington Post), and having a long list of corrupt close associates. Imagine if Trump said words that condemned the racism and supported those who want change. Imagine how his base might, though momentarily confused, begin to change their rhetoric.
Clearly, the above scenario is fantasy. But even if all Donald Trump did were to condemn the police violence against black people that has brought us to this point, or, if he even addressed the nation in some sort of attempt to be empathetic or induce calm, it might offer, even momentarily, some reassurance that there is, after all, someone in the White House who is trying to lead.
But Donald Trump has chosen not to condemn police violence against black people.
Trump has instead turned his condemnation toward the Democrat leaders of states and cities where protests have taken place. Trump has repeatedly told Democrat leaders in Minnesota, including Governor Walz and Mayor X, of Minneapolis, that they need to “get tough” on protests.
On Saturday, Trump tweeted, “Liberal Governors and Mayors must get MUCH tougher or the Federal Government will step in and do what has to be done, and that includes using the unlimited power of our Military and many arrests.”
On Monday, during a phone call with the governors, Trump called them “weak.” Though he berated governors and urged them to be “tough,” Trump himself had hidden in the White House bunker on Sunday, after crowds outside the White House became hostile. It’s possible that the Secret Service persuaded him to retreat to the bunker, but Trump has chosen to hide in a bunker, literal or figurative, each time the country has faced a crisis (such as the COVID-19 pandemic) that called for a president’s leadership.
And on Monday evening, as a group of protesters in Washington, D.C. demonstrated peacefully, Trump decided that, after hiding in the bunker over the weekend, he needed to show that he was a tough guy. It was more important for him to “dominate” the scene than it was to connect with the demonstrators and empathize with their pain.
At Trump’s bidding, and after Trump’s having just said a moment before that he was on the side of the protesters, U.S. Military Police moved in on the peaceful demonstrators. Without provocation, the MPs deployed tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse the crowd. They were making way for Trump, who wanted to take a stroll through the park to a church so that he could pose for a photo op with a Bible in his hand and impersonate a godly president.
During Monday’s bizarre and disturbing spectacle, Trump also announced that the states should deploy their Army National Guard forces to help with the protests. If states don’t bring in the National Guard, said Trump, he’ll send the U.S. Army.
Despite beating his figurative chest about the protestors and proclaiming himself “the Law and Order President,” though, Trump has remained silent on the topics of police brutality and the police murder of George Floyd.
Now, as in the past, he points to, and magnifies every issue but the real one, taking to Twitter to promote divisiveness, blame, falsehoods, conspiracy theories, and, especially in the case of the current demonstrations, violence.
Earlier last week, in reference to the demonstrations and unrest in Minneapolis, Trump tweeted, “When the looting starts, the shooting starts,” which was widely seen as a threat to shoot demonstrators. Trump tried to walk back this comment on Twitter, saying that he really meant that shooting was a natural consequence of looting.
Donald Trump either doesn’t understand the difference between the peaceful protesters and the opportunistic looters and rioters, or he just doesn’t care. Or, more likely, he does understand the difference, and is taking delight in the confusion, rallying his base as he provokes the “opposition.”
When the difference between those who simply want to exercise their right to a peaceful demonstration, and those who only come to a demonstration for the looting and vandalism gets blurred, it also blurs the line between the good actors and the bad, giving false justification for the police to “get tough” on all demonstrators. It also perpetuates the narrative that black people who demonstrate, as well as those who demonstrate along with them on their behalf, are “thugs.” Trump knows all this.
The time for Donald Trump to step up and be a president instead of an inciter has passed. Trump has proven beyond doubt that he is not interested or able to take the country successfully through a crisis.
In the span of less than three months, Trump let the country fall into a pandemic that has now killed more than 100,000 Americans. In the span of one week, the nation, under Trump, has become a mass of violence, fire, and fury ignited by a brutal act of racism that Trump has not directly addressed.
We can, and must, vote to protect our unraveling nation from the likes of Donald Trump. With six more months till Election Day, and the country still in the throes of both COVID-19 and the aftermath of George Floyd’s death, however, it’s terrifying to think of how much more damage Donald Trump could do.

Trump tells governors to ‘dominate’ protesters | CNN [2020-06-01]

George Floyd riots: Donald Trump rushed to bunker as protesters surrounded White House | 7NEWS Australia [2020-05-31]

Twitter, Truth, and Donald Trump

This week, Twitter provoked Donald Trump’s ire when, for the first time, it added a fact-check warning to a couple of his tweets. Trump had earlier falsely tweeted that mail-in voting was fraudulent and would cause rigged elections.

“We added a label to two @realDonaldTrump Tweets about California’s vote-by-mail plans as part of our efforts to enforce our civic integrity policy,” posted Twitter Safety. “We believe those Tweets could confuse voters about what they need to do to receive a ballot and participate in the election process.”

Twitter also posted this:

“What you need to know – Trump claimed that mail-in ballots would lead to ‘a Rigged Election.’ However, fact-checkers say there is no evidence that mail-in ballots are linked to voter fraud. – Trump falsely claimed that California will send mail-in ballots to ‘anyone living in the state, no matter who they are or how they got there.’ In fact, only registered voters will receive ballots. – Five states already vote entirely by mail and all states offer some form of mail-in absentee voting, according to NBC News.”

Trump responded by accusing Twitter of election interference. “Twitter is now interfering in the 2020 Presidential Election,” he tweeted on Tuesday. “They are saying my statement on Mail-In Ballots, which will lead to massive corruption and fraud, is incorrect, based on fact-checking by Fake News CNN and the Amazon Washington Post…”

Holy projection, Batman! “Election interference” is Trump’s term for shining the light of truth on his actual attempted election interference.

Taking his cue from authoritarian rulers everywhere, Trump continued his tirade by threatening to shut down or at least heap regulations on social media outlets (namely, Twitter). Trump has already taken measures to silence other entities, such as science and the media, when they bring forth information that contradicts Trump’s version of reality. Now, In yet another demonstration of his efforts to squelch what he perceives as opposition, he is attacking Twitter for daring to fact check his tweets.

“Republicans feel that social media platforms totally silence conservative voices,” Trump tweeted later on Tuesday. “We will strongly regulate, or close them down, before we can ever allow this to happen. We saw what they attempted to do, and failed, in 2016. We can’t let a more sophisticated version of that…

“…happen again. Just like we can’t let large-scale Mail-In Ballots take root in our Country. It would be a free for all on cheating, forgery and the theft of Ballots. Whoever cheated the most would win. Likewise, Social Media. Clean up your act. NOW!!!!”

What, exactly, does Trump mean by “silencing conservative voices”? It appears that he means “encouraging Twitter followers to check out the facts.”

If we focus on reality, truth hasn’t appeared to be a big factor in what Donald Trump and his associated “conservative voices” post and tweet. The accountability they want from social media outlets is not for the sake of truth, but rather for the sake of allowing Trump and his allies to post anything while restricting information—including factual information—that contradicts what they’ve said.

If anything, Twitter hasn’t gone far enough in its policies regarding the integrity of tweets. Its reaction to a recent Trump slanderfest, in fact, was quite different. Twitter has refrained from removing a series of Trump tweets that promote a conspiracy theory that MSNBC news host and former Republican Congressman Joe Scarborough was guilty of murdering an employee (this was proven in court to be false). The widower of the deceased woman asked Twitter directly to remove the Tweets, but so far, at least in this matter, Twitter says that Trump’s tweets have not violated any laws.

Neither has Twitter, by acting on Trump’s mail-in voting tweets. For now, at least, despite his threats, Donald Trump is limited in his authority to shut down or suppress social media outlets.

“Trump would llke to shut them down because of the message. That’s something you can’t do,” said Herbert Hovenkamp, a University of Pennsylvania law professor. “Trump doesn’t have any authority to shut down a company that’s not breaking the law.”

Trump’s threats to squelch Twitter not only show his ignorance of the law, but also show that he hasn’t considered how else, if not via Twitter, he would exercise his off-the-rails communication strategy with his base.

Nevertheless, on Thursday, taking yet another cue from authoritarian leaders everywhere, Trump signed an executive order that could give the federal government oversight of political speech.

Ironically, as he signed it, Trump said, “We’re here today to defend free speech from one of the greatest dangers.”

Not only does Donald Trump refuse to examine his own words and actions, he seeks to smother any entity that attempts to do it for him.

In the standard version of “Land of the free and home of the brave,” “free” comes with responsibility, and “brave” comes with integrity. In Donald Trump’s version, “free” means “getting away with whatever you can” (but only if you’re a Trump ally) and “brave” only applies to those who see integrity as cowardice.

Donald Trump appears to believe that “freedom of speech” extends only to those who share his worldview, and he clearly views a “fact check” label as censorship. And though Twitter may not actually remove Trump’s tweets, we can hope that going forward, Twitter posts a “fact check” label every time Trump tweets a lie.

Trump takes on Twitter | ABC News [2020-05-27]

Trump Threatens Social Media Companies After Twitter Fact Checks His Tweets | NBC Nightly News [2020-05-27]