Trump's insatiable ego is destroying the former president
Just before I posted this piece, the former president gave a press conference. The questions werenât as difficult as those he faced at last weekâs convention of the National Association of Black Journalists, but if the current Theory of Trump is accurate, they arenât going to help Donald Trump. Theyâre going to hurt him. We should all be so lucky.
The current Theory of Trump comes from Sarah Longwell. Sheâs the publisher of The Bulwark, a former Republican and a pollster. Sheâs often on cable news talking about what swing voters want. Last week, after the NABJâs interview, she said the more people see Trump, the lower his approval ratings are. The less they see, the higher they are.
Thatâs her Theory of Trump, and that should sound familiar to you. I have been saying for months that most people, most of the time, have not been paying attention to politics. Thatâs why the presidentâs approval rating has been so low relative to Trumpâs. Once he secured the GOP nomination, people would start paying attention, and when they did, I argued, Joe Bidenâs approval rating would start to improve.
It may not look like it, since the president is no longer in the running, but I was right â for about two days. On June 25, the polling average of the presidentâs approval rating eclipsed Trumpâs for the first time this year. (This is according to 538âs polling average tracker, and granted, it was low, about 40 percent.) But then came The Disaster Debate on June 27. That was the end of my theory, at least as it applied to Biden.
The part about Trump was right, though, and Longwellâs Theory seems to affirm that. It also seems to affirm another of my arguments here at the Editorial Board â that Trump is an âaffirmative actionâ candidate.
His approval rating increases when his time in public decreases. So his success isnât because of him. Itâs in spite of him. Something is pushing those numbers up, of course, namely the Republicans, the rightwing media apparatus, the billionaire class and Washington press corps generally oriented toward the preferences of white people. Trump doesnât earn ratings. They are given to him. If we accept the illiberal view of affirmative action â it rewards the undeserving â thatâs him.
Being the âaffirmative actionâ candidate isnât all sunshine, though. Like many a rich manâs son, Trump doesnât believe he has been given his success. He believes he has earned it, and he has earned it by means familiar to many a rich manâs son â by dominating people, usually through some combination of breaking the law and daring authorities to enforce it. And itâs this belief that he has earned his success through domination thatâs putting this rich manâs son in a pickle. The more he feels the urge to dominate peopleâs minds, the less people want, and the less people want, the less likely he is going to win the election.
Remember the difference between need and want. Vice President Kamala Harris wants to be president. She wants your attention for the purpose of achieving that objective. (If she loses, she will go back to her own life, a pretty good one, Iâd say.) Trump, however, doesnât want your attention. He needs it. He must have it, the way an addict must have a fix. And not getting what he must have is an offense, indeed a serious injustice, practically a crime worthy of any reaction, up to and including the attempted paramilitary takeover of the United States government. (If he loses this election, heâs probably going to die.)
And because he must have it, he canât understand why others donât. I suspect his world fell to pieces the day Biden dropped out. He really believes Biden canât possibly believe anything he ever says, because Trump never believes anything he ever says. For Trump, men in power do not willingly give it up. Yet the president did, and now, in addition to facing a landscape permanently changed by his departure, Trump must face the stone-cold reality of being wrong about everything.
Heâll never admit it, of course, and such denial is why Trump said, during todayâs presser, that he hasnât ârecalibratedâ his campaign to accommodate a landscape permanently changed by Bidenâs departure. Such denial is also why he said, at todayâs presser, that it was virtually unconstitutional for him to face Harris, instead of the man heâs been campaigning against for the last five years. Not only does he deserve your attention, he deserves things to stay as they were, and if this rich manâs son doesnât get what he deserves, thereâs going to be hell to pay.
Which is probably what Sarah Longwell was talking about when she said voters, when they see more of Trump than they would like to see, see his âdecomposition.â They are seeing what they could not see as long as the president was in the running, and they could not see Trumpâs âdecomposition,â because the press corps did not see it. These same people saw The Disaster Debate, too. They saw Trumpâs habitual incoherence. Yet no one, virtually no one, called on him to drop out.
Perhaps todayâs presser will be for Trump what the debate was for Biden. Biden hoped to ease concerns about his age with a knockout performance. Trump may have hoped to quell concerns about him after âdecomposingâ at last weekâs convention of the National Association of Black Journalists. Heâs always been a joke, but rarely have people laughed at him, as they did at the NABJ. He believes himself the greatest of all time, but after that, he was reduced to a mere goat. The question is whether the press and pundits corps will do for Trump what they did for Biden, by which I mean ha ha, just kidding.
Even so, today everyone could see Trump is a man who canât adjust, wonât adjust, because to do so would mean changing a lifetime of habits, including the urge to rush toward television cameras to dominate peopleâs minds, thus accelerating the pickle heâs in, even as he believes heâs taking, not what heâs been given, but what he deserves.