Trump's been quieter lately. Is that a trend?
Loading...
The last few days have been perhaps the quietest stretch of the new Trump presidency.
On Tuesday, for instance, President Trump went to the African-American Museum in Washington, and the visit seemed ... normal. Mr. Trump walked the halls like any respectful visitor, paying particular attention to Nat Turner鈥檚 Bible and an exhibit on boxer Muhammad Ali. Afterwards he gave a short speech decrying racism and anti-Semitic attacks.
鈥淚 pledge to do everything I can to continue that promise of freedom for African Americans and for every American. So important. Nothing more important,鈥 Trump said.
Meanwhile, Trump鈥檚 tweets have been relatively non-flammable. He hasn鈥檛 fired anyone high-ranking. His choice of Lt. Gen. H. R. McMaster for national security adviser has drawn praise from all quarters.
Has Trump pivoted to a new, more presidential persona? Has the other Trump 鈥 the one prone to social-media outbursts and verbal spats with journalists 鈥 been put away in a corner, or at least banished for now?
That鈥檚 unlikely. Judging by Trump鈥檚 track record, his unvarnished personality will reappear soon. But the good Trump/bad Trump duality of this week offers a reminder that the president鈥檚 approach can indeed vary. We all contain multitudes, to paraphrase the poet Walt Whitman 鈥 and that includes Trump, who has flaws and strengths, as all presidents have.
鈥淭he question is, can he go more than four or five days without creating some controversy over something awful he tweeted because he got angry over something he saw on Fox News?鈥 says Brian Rosenwald, a political and media historian at the University of Pennsylvania. 鈥淧robably no.鈥
The Trump administration appears well aware that it needs to step back and calm down the music following weeks in which the White House appeared close to chaotic. Time Magazine鈥檚 , which depicted Trump beset by a cyclone of wind and rain in the Oval Office, isn鈥檛 a look any president wants to see, even one who fancies himself disrupter-in-chief.
Even supporters say: Leave Twitter alone
So this week the watchword is perhaps 鈥渟unny.鈥 With Congress on recess and lawmakers back in their districts, it鈥檚 a good time to pull back a bit and get ready for Washington battles to come. Next week, Trump will give his first big address to a joint session of Congress, and Press Secretary Sean Spicer at his briefing on Wednesday said the tone of that address is likely to be optimistic.
鈥淭his is an opportunity for him to lay out a very positive vision for the nation and to really let America know where we can go and how we can get there and the potential that we have as a nation,鈥 Mr. Spicer said.
Of course, many of Trump鈥檚 core supporters are happy with his combative style. When he denigrates the media and speaks out against the judiciary in support of his partial immigration ban, they feel he his taking a stand against what they feel to be the strangling kudzu of political correctness.
But even many of them believe it鈥檚 time for Trump to take it down a notch.
Roy Orlinger, a retired Georgia Bureau of Investigation agent and a Trump supporter in Warm Springs, Ga., says part of Trump鈥檚 strategy for success is that 鈥渉e doesn鈥檛 have to answer to the news media.鈥 However, he questions Trump鈥檚 reliance on short Twitter messages to tweak 鈥 and at times inflame 鈥 the national conversation.
Though he likens Trump鈥檚 tweeting to Presdient Franklin D. Roosevelt鈥檚 fireside chats, Mr. Orlinger ruefully notes that FDR resisted doing too many of those due to a belief that it would water down their effectiveness.
鈥淭witter could ultimately be counterproductive鈥 for Trump鈥檚 policy agenda, Orlinger says. 鈥淗e needs to leave it alone.鈥
Republicans on the fence
Trump鈥檚 ability to connect with some elements of US society in a way they鈥檝e been yearning for is one big reason he won the White House in the first place. But not all Trump supporters are die-hards, points out Brian Rosenwald of the University of Pennsylvania. Some Republicans and Republican-leaning independents cringe at Trump鈥檚 crude slaps and harsh words.
Polls reflect this split attitude. Fully 89 percent of Republican-leaning voters judge Trump a 鈥渟trong leader,鈥 in a recent large . But less than half, 48 percent, describe him as 鈥渆ven-tempered.鈥
Thus in the recent stretch of relatively even Trump behavior, his overall polls have ticked upwards. True, daily tracking polls are pretty variable. But in Gallup鈥檚 tracking survey Trump bottomed out the day after he fired National Security Adviser Ray Flynn, with a job approval rating of negative 18 percentage points. Since then, Trump has done better. The most recent poll puts net approval at negative 10. (That鈥檚 the share of Americans who approve, minus the share who disapprove).
The bottom line: It appears that a certain percentage of Republican-leaning voters want to support Trump, but waver depending on his behavior and mood. When he tweets, they flee. When he鈥檚 quiet, they come back. That could indicate that Trump鈥檚 polls aren鈥檛 quite as bad as they seem.
鈥淭here are a lot of Republicans who desperately want to support him,鈥 Professor Rosenwald says.
Would Trump be better off to not tweet or vent at freewheeling press conferences at all? Yes, he probably would. But President Lyndon Johnson would have been better off if he had not been so afraid of being judged weak on Vietnam, and reduced the size of US forces in the country. President Bill Clinton would have been better off if he鈥檇 stayed away from a young intern. Sometimes strong political skills come packaged with weaknesses.
Beware the elites?
For Trump, the real problem may not be voters so much as the so-called elite groups he attacks.
Consider his press conference of last week. His blustering, at times hard-to-follow performance might have played well enough with public supporters.
But members of Congress, lobbyists, ambassadors, journalists, bureaucrats, and other professional political participants whose jobs required them to follow the entire performance probably had a far more negative reaction, according to political scientist David Hopkins of Boston College.
Many of them thought it a strange performance. And they can have a large influence on the success or failure of Trump鈥檚 domestic and foreign agenda in the months ahead.
A few tweet-light days may not change their opinions.
鈥淭he most important audience for Trump鈥檚 appearance was the highly observant set of ... influential political figures whose trust and cooperation is essential to the success of any administration, but who have grown increasingly uneasy over the course of the past month,鈥 on his 鈥淗onest Graft鈥 political blog.
Staff writer Patrik Jonsson contributed to this report.聽