Donald Trump tests the waters for his “declare victory and resign” strategy
reported by: Bill Palmer Updated: 11:06 pm EDT Fri Oct 13, 2017
Donald Trump finally began testing the waters on Friday night. There are those who have long insisted that “Trump is too [insert any adjective] to ever resign.” Then there those who know him better, such as his own former ghostwriter, who all believe Trump will resign if he believes he’s going to be ousted anyway. Trump’s own lifelong pattern has been to face defeat by declaring victory and walking away, as evidenced by his six bankruptcies. Now Trump is at least sticking his toe into those waters.
It’s important to understand the context of what Trump was facing when he sat down for his Friday night Twitter marathon. He’d just taken reckless unilateral action aimed at destroying two of President Obama’s most celebrated accomplishments, Obamacare and the Iran deal. It felt a lot like a desperate criminal trying to torch the place before fleeing. Then on Friday afternoon we learned that Reince Priebus and Paul Manafort may both end up flipping on him in the Russia scandal. That explained why Trump seemed to think his presidency is about to die. Then Twitter happened.
All his other semi-coherent Friday night tweets aside, one stood out in particular. Trump tweeted “Such a wonderful statement from the great Lou Dobbs: ‘We take up what may be the most accomplished presidency in modern American history.’” Dobbs is one of Trump’s few remaining apologists in the media, and he’s a fellow racist, so it’s not shocking that he would consider Trump’s utterly failed presidency to be a success. What’s notable is that Trump is now looking to push the sentiment that he did indeed succeed on the whole.