The Washington Post's
Dana Milbank notes how government "works" under Trump:
On Tuesday, even as the administration announced that it was ending
protection from deportation for the 800,000 “dreamers” — mostly young
people who know no country but America — there were signs that Trump had
no idea what he was doing. “As late as one hour before the decision was
to be announced, administration officials privately expressed concern
that Mr. Trump might not fully grasp the details of the steps he was
about to take, and when he discovered their full impact, would change
his mind,” Michael Shear and Julie Hirschfeld Davis of the New York Times reported, citing an anonymous source.
Sure enough, Trump fired off a tweet Tuesday night that revised his
position. He called on Congress to “legalize” the dreamers program and
vowed to “revisit the issue” if Congress can’t.
Even Trump’s close advisers seem to have little knowledge of, much less control over, what he says and does.
Trump
has signaled that he wants to end a free-trade deal with South Korea,
even though his national security adviser, his defense secretary and the
director of the National Economic Council all object. He and Defense
Secretary James Mattis have contradicted each other about whether to
talk with North Korea. Chief of Staff John Kelly’s attempts to tone down
Trump’s antics have reportedly led Trump to escalate his attacks — on
Kelly. Trump has publicly criticized Attorney General Jeff Sessions and
repeatedly contradicted Secretary of State Rex Tillerson. Ivanka Trump
and husband Jared Kushner have let it leak that Trump ignored their
advice on Charlottesville and other matters.
The biggest boost to the economy of a Trump presidency is probably going to be to the publishing industry, as there is going to be a never ending supply of "My first hand experience of chaos in the White House" memoirs.
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