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Tuesday, January 8, 2019

Trump's Narcissistic Desire to Use the Border Wall to Cement his Legacy Has Created a Cruel and Unnecessary Government Crisis


Two and a half weeks into the partial government has given Americans yet another opportunity to assess the leadership skills, or lack thereof, of its current President, Donald Trump.  While I am not a psychologist and don’t claim to be making a clinical diagnosis, Trump’s refusal to sign a budget that doesn’t appropriate $5.7 billion for a wall on the US-Mexico border only further shows his dangerously narcissistic tendencies.
 

Like many narcissists, Trump is manipulative.  He has shown his character for taking advantage of people’s weaknesses for his own benefit.  For example, all during the presidential campaign Trump insisted that not only would he build a wall, but that Mexico would pay for it.  Having Mexico pay for the wall was never even a remote possibility.  But the claim won him cheers ad accolades from his supporters.  Now that it is clear that Mexico will not be paying for the wall, Trump is manipulating the ignorance of trade agreements and how tariffs work among his supporters to make the claim that Mexico really will be paying for the wall.
 

Trump argues that by scrapping NAFTA and concluding the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), Mexico will be paying for the wall through tariffs paid to the United States.  Let’s breakdown the inaccuracies of this claim.  USMCA did not really scrap NAFTA.  Rather, it built upon NAFTA structures to adjust some of the agreed upon tariff rates.  In fact, trade agreements are not really a vehicle for a country to raise revenue.  Government typical enter into trade agreements to try to open more markets for its exporters by having their counterparts lower their tariffs.  The United States attempted to open more markets for US agricultural goods, for example, by getting Canada and Mexico to lower their tariff rates.
 

At any rate, governments do not pay tariffs.  Importers do.  Importers need to make a profit, so they typically pass the tariffs of to the consumer in the form of higher prices.  Even where US tariffs increase, Mexico will not be footing the bill.  US consumers will.
 

Moreover, USMCA is not yet part of US law.  To become US law, Congress will have to act.  Either 2/3 of the Senate must ratify it as a treaty, or both Houses of Congress must approve implementing legislation, just as they did for NAFTA.  Until Congress acts, the USMCA has no effect on US law.
 

However, many Americans lack the very specific knowledge of how trade agreements and tariffs work.  Trump is manipulating that ignorance to make it appear as though he is living up to his campaign promise.
 

Trump is attempting to  manipulate the racially-based fears of his supporters to support his refusal to sign legislation to fund the Government unless he gets his wall.  In defending his desire for a wall, Trump cherry-picks cases where heinous crimes were committed by undocumented aliens.  In doing so, Trump creates the impression that all undocumented aliens are violent criminals.  This is consistent with his claims during the campaign that Mexicans are rapists and murders.  He and his supporters ignore statistics showing aliens, including undocumented aliens, commit fewer crimes than native born US citizens.
 

Trump has demonstrated a complete lack of empathy for those adversely affected by the shutdown.  Indeed, through some of his public statements, Trump appears to be saying that those suffering because of the shutdown are getting what they deserve because of their lack of support for him.  He has tried to change lexicon of the debate, calling the shutdown a “strike” in closed door sessions with congressional leaders, as if to shift the blame on the governmental employees.  He has noted that most of the workers furloughed or working without pay are Democrats, as if to say that they deserve what they get for supporting the opposition party.  He has shown little concern for the 800,000 who may be going without a paycheck.  Moreover, he has given no attention to the government contractors, who will not only be going without a paycheck, but who, unlike government employees, will not receive back pay.
 

This is another example of Trump’s manipulation of the ignorance of his supporters.  Many of his supporters, who do not understand how government works, have been quick to argue that since only non-essential employees are being furloughed, it shows the government is too big and ought to be cut.
 

The fact is, Trump is using an immoral tactic essentially to extort something he wants, but for which there is little support, for the sake of creating his legacy.  A government shutdown is immoral because it adversely affects people who have no role to play in the debate over the border wall.  Government employees risk falling behind in mortgage payments, utility bills and other bills because of a lack of a paycheck.  Some employees risk losing health insurance for dependents.
 

Yet, it is being viewed as simply just another tactic to get something out of Congress despite fierce resistance.  The last government shutdown, for example, was forced upon the United States by the Tea Party, who demanded the showdown over funding the Affordable Care Act.  Because the Tea Party saw that as a successful demonstration of its power, it has become just another arrow in the Republicans’ quiver.
 

It is particularly egregious where polls have shown that a majority of Americans oppose the border wall.  In fact, Trump clearly made tough immigration enforcement a hallmark of his message in the mid-term elections, which resulted in the Democrats taking control of the House of Representatives.  Yet, while Republicans like to point out that elections have consequences, they refuse to accept the consequences of losing the House, which include a lack of political support for the wall.
 

Trump has ignored all of this, just so he can push for the wall to have tangible proof of his legacy in American history.  The shutdown is a very selfish use of an immoral tactic for something that does not have strong public support.
 

Indeed, Trump’s mistake is that he has failed to learn from history.  There is strong and vocal support for the wall among hard core Trump supporters.  Trump has chosen to play to his base by projecting an image of being tough on immigration enforcement.  But, Trump engaged in the same tactic leading up to the mid-terms.  He used news coverage of a large group of Central Americans traveling together through Mexico in an attempt to apply for asylum in the United States to incite fear among his supporters of the caravan.  He labeled Democrats as soft on immigration enforcement and supporters of open borders.  In the end, his party lost the majority in the House, giving Democrats a power base upon which to oppose the President.  There is no reason to believe that playing to his base will be any more successful here.
 

As usual, Trump has made this dispute about him.  While he attempts to avoid responsibility now, claiming Democrats won’t give him what he wants, he can’t escape that the government shut-down has real world adverse consequences on people who have nothing to do with immigration policy.  Because Trump is such a wild card, there is no way of telling whether he will back down and attempt to paint it as a victory, or let the shut-down drag on and continue to cause widespread pain.  One can only hope that Trump can overcome his stubborn streak, agree to legislation to re-open the government, and continue to negotiate immigration reform without holding the welfare of government employees hostage.

 

By:  William J. Kovatch, Jr.