The whiny core of Trumpism
Opinion by James Downie
Few Trump White House members have survived the administrations tumult as well as Peter Navarro. The economics professor and failed California political candidate is officially the director of the Office of Trade and Manufacturing Policy; unofficially, he has elbowed his way into the governments coronavirus response. As The Post reported earlier this month, two coronavirus-related contracts Navarro championed are under internal scrutiny, yet his position appears to remain secure because of his one true ally: President Trump. That should be no surprise: When you strip away the glitz that inherited money can buy, Navarro embodies the whiny core of Trumpism.
From the moment Navarro appeared on CNNs State of the Union on Sunday, it was clear he hadnt agreed to this question-and-answer session to actually answer questions. When host Jake Tapper opened by inquiring about the administrations response to the West Coast wildfires, Navarro had other priorities in mind. Before we get started ... I would really like to congratulate President Trump on being nominated for the peace prize, the Nobel Peace Prize, he said, before rattling off a list of the presidents groundbreaking work like relative stability on the Korean Peninsula.
Tapper steered the interview back to the fires, and specifically their relationship to climate change. It was an obvious question, since as Tapper pointed out, Navarro co-wrote a paper 20 years ago that called climate change one of the most important environmental problems of our time. So, asked Tapper, is anyone at the White House listening to you on this issue? Navarro stammered, Look, Im not thats not my expertise, Jake. And, really, I came here to talk about a lot of things.
That was the last on my list. Yes, the wildfires that have burned millions of acres of land and killed 33 people at last count were the last thing this White House wanted to discuss.
Instead, Navarro urged Tapper turn to the revelations from Bob Woodwards new book, a request the host was only too happy to oblige. Tapper played two clips, the first a recording of Trump telling Woodward on Feb. 7 that the coronavirus is far deadlier than the flu, the second a video of the president then saying the opposite to CNNs Sanjay Gupta later that month. He was misleading the American people, why? asked Tapper. First, Navarro tried to change the subject to giving the president credit for the China travel ban, claiming Trump was called a xenophobe and a racist by Joe Biden
who later had to apologize. When Tapper jumped in to point out neither of those allegations were true, Navarro replied, Well, youre wrong.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/09/13/whiny-core-trumpism/
Gawd I'm so sick of these liars.