When Senator Lloyd Benson was squared off against Senator Dan Quayle in the Vice Presidential Debate in 1988, Quayle, desperate to establish himself as a qualified VP running mate, dropped a JFK reference. Benson dropped a haymaker on Quayle, deadpanning “you’re no Jack Kennedy.“
We have resisted comparing Donald Trump to Ronald Reagan for fear of a haymaker ourselves, as Donald is no Ronald. While each had roles on the TV screen or the big screen previous to ascending to the biggest role in all of the land, they differ in approach far more than they are similar.
Start with the hair styles please. Ronald had a thick, dark, wavy mane seemingly woven to his head since birth to die for. Donald has a thin, white/gray whisp that needs to be woven to his head for fear of it flying away. Ronald was a statesman. Donald states what he thinks and feels in non too subtle way. Ronald had his first lady Nancy incessantly shaping his public perception. Donald has had quite a few ladies and his first lady appears to step back and watch the bullfight from afar.
But, they have one big thing in common. They know leverage when they see it. And, when they see it they use it. And, when they use it, they use it effectively.
Ronald watched as Iran held American hostages for 444 days till the very end of the Jimmy Carter’s mediocre presidency. Mysteriously, on Reagan’s inauguration day, Iran freed the hostages. Ronald played the good cop role on a horse in a TV western a few times. He always got the bad guy and rode off into the sunset with the pretty woman. Iran wanted nothing to do with this cowboy in real life. Did Reagan’s team advance anything to Iran about the consequences of a continued standoff? Probably. Enough said.
Trump called North Korean dictator Kim Jung-Un “Rocket Man” in front of a United Nations gathering. It was not very subtle. It was the equivalent of Nikita Khrushchev’s shoe-banging incident during the 902nd Plenary Meeting of the UN General Assembly held in New York in 1960. During the session Nikita Khrushchev, First Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, pounded his shoe on his delegate-desk in protest of a speech by Philippine delegate Lorenzo Sumulong. It was not so subtle.
Both Ronald and Trump were effective, style points aside.
“Rocket Man” is but one of many verbal jabs, hooks, or TKO’s that the Donald has thrown. It is for that very reason that we continue to be amazed by how wrong the media continues to miss on understanding his approach, and therefore his effectiveness. Every time he jabs, tweets, nicknames, and/or insults a foreign leader or an entire country the media screams in unison that “the sky is falling, the sky is falling.” Except, it isn’t.
In fact it’s the opposite. Trump threatened tariffs on Mexico a couple of weeks back and gave them a short deadline to help on their southern border controlling Central American illegal inflow, and on our southern border helping protect our illegal inflow. Foes of The Donald said many things. “He can’t do that.” “You can’t use tariffs to control immigration.” “It’s unprecedented.” “He’s offended our neighbor again.” The stock market said, “Hold on cowboy.” “This will wreck certain imported products.” “Prices on imports will go through the roof.” One Einstein even lamented, “the price of avocados will go up three fold.”
Our guess is that Donald doesn’t like avocados. And, he doesn’t like illegal immigration even more. So, with zero help from his Democrat friends, Donald got help on his own from his southern friends. Mexico, after all of these years, offered immediate help. Fifteen thousand of their finest are now being deployed on our joint border to stem the flow northward. Another two thousand went south to do the same. It’s amazing what the right carrot on the right stick can do. And, Wall St. rallied once more.
And, it’s equally amazing how many people, tv commentators, and countries totally fail to understand President Trump’s motives and results derived from them. Ronald won with style and grace. Donald wins with a hammer and a chainsaw.
Donald paints outside of the lines. Donald is no Ronald. But, he is Michelangelo in the art of the deal.