Trump’s stunning campaign rewrote all the rules. What about his presidency?
His
candidacy was born in spectacle, nurtured on controversy, and careered
from one self-inflicted disaster to another, overturning every rule of
modern American politics along the way. With virtually no on-the-ground
organization, lackadaisical support at best from the leaders of his own
party, and outspent by a large margin in advertising, Donald J. Trump
won the presidency with a campaign built around raucous rallies and a
visceral appeal to a shrinking slice of the American electorate, the
rural and small-town white working class. To say he did it his way is
almost an understatement.
He
was helped by running against a deeply unpopular opponent. Historians
will debate how much damage was done to Hillary Clinton during the week
that the FBI kept the country in suspense over a renewed investigation
of her emails, but her troubles with the electorate began long before
and ran deeper. She took a hit in the primary from the left wing of her
party, and analysts will be poring over exit polls to figure out whether
the Sanders voters defected in numbers large enough to affect the
outcome. But in the end, Americans just didn’t like or trust Clinton,
and the chance to make history by electing the first woman president of
the United States didn’t bring enough women to her side to offset
Trump’s huge advantage among white men.
Ad-libbing
his way through speeches and firing off random tweets, Trump was riding
a historical wave that almost no one saw coming: a resurgence of
economic and ethnic nationalism sweeping the Western democracies. Even
those whose job it was to detect it — public-opinion pollsters — were
caught by surprise. Trump’s victory was an echo, amplified a hundred
times, of the Brexit vote that opted to take Britain out of the European
Union. Right up through Tuesday night, most polls put the odds of a
Trump victory at well below 50 percent — vanishingly small, in a some
cases — and media organizations that had planned their coverage around a
Clinton victory scrambled to get a handle on the new world they found
themselves in.
Even
some in Trump’s inner circle were “shocked,” as one aide put it,
watching the results roll in to the candidate’s headquarters in Trump
Tower. “I had hoped for this,” one campaign source said. “I knew there
was a chance for this, but I gave it a 30 percent chance. I thought we
would come up just short.” His indefatigable campaign manager, Kellyanne
Conway, had begun the evening making pre-emptive excuses for a loss,
complaining to Chuck Todd of NBC that “We didn’t have the support of the
full Republican infrastructure.” But midway through the night, she was
revising that opinion, telling reporters that the Republican National
Committee had been an “excellent partner” to the campaign. “Absolutely
buoyant. We can smell the win,” Conway texted to Yahoo News.
The
mood was jubilant at Trump’s victory party at the New York Hilton,
where cheers were punctuated by shouts of the de-facto Trump campaign
slogan — “Lock her up!” — and, in honor of FBI Director James Comey, who
may have helped turn voters away from Clinton: “Comey! Comey!”
Did
the Clinton campaign sense the unfolding disaster? In the late
afternoon, Clinton campaign manager John Podesta was spotted stalking
through Times Square with a grim frown. The mood at the Javits Center —
where Clinton expected to give a victory speech under New York City’s
largest glass ceiling —shifted from confident celebration, to concern,
to grief, as Tuesday wore on. The campaign’s uplifting videos, featuring
Clinton’s childhood friend testifying to her “goodness,” jarred with
the increasingly downcast mood of the crowd.
By around 1 a.m., volunteers and supporters began leaving, some in tears, others seemingly in shock.
At
the beginning of the night, the Clinton campaign told reporters that
the candidate and her entire family were watching returns come in at a
nearby hotel. An aide even described the outfit Clinton’s granddaughter
was wearing, providing colorful details to her press corps. But starting
at about 10 p.m., the campaign went silent, and even lower-level
campaign aides disappeared from the Javits Center. Around 2 a.m.,
Podesta appeared briefly at the podium to send the crowd home; the
campaign would have more to say Wednesday morning.
Meanwhile, Clinton’s surrogates started to confront the prospect of defeat.
Julián
Castro, the U.S. secretary of housing, looked depressed as
he contemplated a Trump presidency around 1 a.m. Tuesday night in
the somber Javits Center.
“If
Donald Trump wins, aside from the politics, the immediate concern is
that he become a leader and a president and not just a campaigner,”
Castro said, adding that Trump has an “enormous” responsibility to
become steadier as president.
When
asked if he believed Trump would build a wall on the U.S.-Mexico
border, Castro replied: “My hope is that would never happen.”
“What
you saw today was not a mandate for every little utterance he made like
building a wall or having a deportation force,” Castro said. “I believe
it was an expression of a desire for change.”
Meanwhile,
former Gov. Howard Dean of Vermont told Yahoo News via e-mail that
the surprise upset was “a successful populist revolt,” and adding that
he believes NATO “is in danger.” Asked what went wrong with
Clinton’s campaign, he replied, “Who knows?”
____
Trump
ran as the candidate of change, and his victory will be seen as a
renunciation of the status quo. But a call for change is one of the
reliable constants of American politics, and by most traditional
measures, the United States is not in grave crisis. Unemployment is
below 5 percent, crime in most cities is low by the standards of a
decade ago, and the militant Muslim group ISIS, although still a threat,
is losing territory in Iraq to a coalition of American allies, with
minimal U.S. casualties. But when Donald Trump told his vast crowds of
followers that America was losing all over the world, they believed it —
and agreed that he was the person who could reverse it.
The
reverberations were felt around the world, as stock markets and the
dollar plunged in reaction to a victory of a candidate who had run a
campaign against international finance and free trade. The Mexican peso
took the biggest hit of all, and gold, the traditional refuge of capital
in turbulent times, soared.
Trump
alienated immigrants, made enemies of Muslims, insulted and mocked
women, and still won. He left unchallenged the belief that he had
avoided paying federal income taxes for years, he faced plausible, if
unproven, accusations of running a fraudulent business (his “Trump
University”) and he retweeted racist and anti-Semitic images and memes —
and still he won.
Hillary
Clinton, who had come in for praise — including from Trump himself — as
an effective senator and secretary of state while she held those
offices, was endorsed by practically every newspaper in the country. She
raised far more money than he did and campaigned with a popular
president, with her own chief opponent in the party, with Beyoncé and
Bruce Springsteen — and still she lost.
Trump
will take office under a cloud of litigation, including the lawsuits he
has vowed to file against 11 women who have accused him of making
unwanted sexual advances. Gloria Allred, who represents several of the
women, said she assumes that as president-elect, Trump will have better
things to do. But there are also lawsuits charging that his eponymous
“university” was a scam that bilked students out of thousands of dollars
of tuition. One of those is scheduled to go to trial on Nov. 28, before
U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel, whom Trump has claimed cannot
preside impartially over the case, given his Mexican heritage. If Trump
abides by his promise not to settle the suit, he will have to appear in
court in person.
Trump
carried along to victory enough senators and members of the House to
ensure that the country will be run by Republicans for at least the next
two years. Unlike Clinton, who was surrounded by a large retinue of
policy advisers who had served years in government, Trump has a
relatively small circle to draw upon to staff his administration. Rudy
Giuliani, a U.S. attorney and associate attorney general before he
became mayor of New York, has been mentioned as a possible attorney
general. In the closing days of the campaign, he warned “There’s a
revolution going on inside the FBI” because agents were being blocked
from investigating Hillary Clinton and the Clinton Foundation. Giuliani
could be expected to give them a green light.
Michael
Flynn, the retired U.S. Army general who has served as Trump’s chief
foreign policy adviser, seems a likely candidate to become Trump’s
national security adviser or possibly director of national intelligence.
There
are a few other outsize personalities close to Trump who can be
expected to play big roles: Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich or New
Jersey Gov. Chris Christie could be in the running for chief of staff.
But
mainstream Republican officeholders like Paul Ryan, the speaker of the
House, don’t share most of Trump’s agenda — and many of them, including
Ryan himself, are reliably said to detest him personally. The foreign
policy wing of the party was appalled by Trump’s ascent, regarding him
as naively fixated on trade issues with Mexico and China, and
dangerously unconcerned about the threat of a resurgent Russia. But the
party has a platform that includes tax cuts for the top income brackets,
repealing Obamacare, drastically pruning business and environmental
regulation, and reversing the Obama administration’s climate-change
initiatives. Undoubtedly to their surprise, they now appear likely to
get all that — along with a border wall, a deportation force and an
unpredictable president with almost no grounding in policy or
connections to party leaders. It may turn out to be a lesson about being
careful what you wish for — but it is a problem the Democrats can only
wish they had instead.
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