Analysis: Trump abdicating in the job he fought to retain
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s days in office are numbered. But he’s already stopped doing much of his job.
In the last three weeks, a bomb went off in a major city and the president said nothing about it. The coronavirus surged to horrifying new levels of illness and death in the U.S. without Trump acknowledging the awful milestones. A violent mob incited by the president’s own words chanted for Mike Pence’s lynching at the U.S. Capitol and Trump made no effort to reach out to his vice-president.
Trump only belatedly ordered flags flown at half-staff to honour an officer who gave his life defending the Capitol, and couldn’t be bothered to describe the officer’s actions. On Tuesday, he denied any responsibility for fomenting the insurrection at the Capitol and said his remarks to supporters who stormed the building in events that took the lives of five people, including a Capitol Police officer, were “totally appropriate.”
The transgressions, big and small — of norms, of leadership, of basic decency — cast a pall over his final days in office, and, in the view of even close advisers speaking privately, have indelibly stained his legacy. A half-dozen current administration officials expressed dismay at the president’s action’s in recent weeks, speaking on the condition of anonymity because they are still working for Trump.