Thursday, February 25, 2016

What's this Trump candidacy all about?

By Jeff Orvis

At first it seemed like just another publicity stunt. It had been a few minutes since Donald Trump had been the center of attention on a TV show, voting people off with a robust “You're fired!” But when he announced he would be a candidate for president, I doubt few took him very seriously.

From the outset, the Trump candidacy was anything but normal. As the richest person vying for the nation's top office, he vowed that he would not need to solicit campaign funds, that he was his own man and would fully fund his own campaign. On the plus side, he would not have to answer to any big campaign contributor. On the down side, he would apparently not have to answer on any of the voting public.

Many of us thought this must be a joke, that we would wake up one morning and he would say, “April fool!” There would be plenty of time to turn our attention to more traditional candidates to decide who would be the leader of the free world. So far, we haven't heard those words and as the weeks and months continue to dwindle before the November election, Trump continues to jet around the country on his own plane, telling it like it is, at least how he thinks it is. He continues to draw media attention with more and more outrageous statements each day.

Many of us are far from happy with the way we elect our president and other public officials. The little guy seems less and less important and thanks to Supreme Court rulings and the failure of Congress to pass any meaningful election spending reform, money means more than votes when it comes to winning an election.
So after months of growing weary of constant campaign commercials and appearances by dozens of candidates, I suspect that some people are drawn to Trump as a sort of anti-candidate, as some kind of a joke.

The thing is, there are a growing number of voters who aren't laughing anymore. They are being won over by his campaign style, his bluntness and unfortunately aren't considering just what four years of a Trump presidency might be like. And I'm beginning to wonder if even Trump himself has stopped to realize what at least four years in the White House might really be like.

Being the President is much more than brokering a business deal, or building a Manhattan high rise or an Atlantic City casino. It is not a monarchy. You have to know how to compromise with 535 other men and women in Congress. And as much as we might like, it's tough to fire them if you can't get them to act as you think they should.

Despite how we might not agree with some of the decisions our Presidents have made, we have grown to expect them to know how to rejoice in national accomplishments as well as know how to lend a sympathetic ear to people grieving from the loss of soldiers or innocent people in the line of fire during domestic massacres.

A former president said, “The buck stops here.” We expect our president to know more than how to invest that buck. In fact, one of the things Trump would have to do if he was elected would be to surrender all of his financial dealings to a blind trust until he left office. For someone who has spent years playing with vast amounts of money, can we really expect him to turn over the keys to someone else while he motorcades to Andrews Air Force Base to meet a military transport with the bodies of dead soldiers?

I guess I'm not fully convinced Trump will see this campaign through until November. As the Republican party scrambles to find someone who can sideline him, he continues to laugh all the way to the ballot box in one primary after another.

It's clear that Trump is a guy who likes to be in charge. When he suddenly realizes that even as president, he can't fully be in charge, he might decide to end his candidacy and throw his support behind someone else. Of course, he has alienated virtually every other candidate of both parties. But maybe that's what he wants. The next few months will be very interesting.

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