Don't Believe Him: [View all]
Look closely at the first two weeks of Donald Trumps second term and youll see something very different from what he wants you to see.
Donald Trumps first two weeks in the White House have followed Bannons strategy like a script. The flood is the point. The overwhelm is the point. The message wasnt in any one executive order or announcement. It was in the cumulative effect of all of them. The sense that this is Trumps country now. This is his government now. It follows his will. It does what he wants. If Trump tells the state to stop spending money, the money stops. If he says that birthright citizenship is over, its over. Or so he wants you to think. In Trumps first term, we were told: Dont normalize him. In his second, the task is different: Dont believe him.
Trump knows the power of marketing. If you make people believe something is true, you make it likelier that it becomes true. Trump clawed his way back to great wealth by playing a fearsome billionaire on TV; he remade himself as a winner by refusing to admit he had ever lost. The American presidency is a limited office. But Trump has never wanted to be president, at least not as defined in Article II of the U.S. Constitution. He has always wanted to be king. His plan this time is to first play king on TV. If we believe he is already king, we will be likelier to let him govern as a king.
There is a reason Trump is doing all of this through executive orders rather than submitting these same directives as legislation to pass through Congress. A more powerful executive could persuade Congress to eliminate the spending he opposes or reform the civil service to give himself the powers of hiring and firing that he seeks. To write these changes into legislation would make them more durable and allow him to argue their merits in a more strategic way. Even if Trumps aim is to bring the civil service to heel to rid it of his opponents and turn it to his own ends he would be better off arguing that he is simply trying to bring the high-performance management culture of Silicon Valley to the federal government. You never want a power grab to look like a power grab.
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That is the tension at the heart of Trumps whole strategy: Trump is acting like a king because he is too weak to govern like a president. He is trying to substitute perception for reality. He is hoping that perception then becomes reality. That can only happen if we believe him.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/02/opinion/ezra-klein-podcast-trump-column-read.html?smid=url-share