OPINION

Don't sweat the details

Remember March, when Democrats were in a swivet over President Trump's budget proposal--the one that threatened to gut the Environmental Protection Agency, eliminate funding for public broadcasting and the arts, and use the money for a border wall?

Never mind. The spending bill Congress produced last week cuts the EPA by all of 1 percent, increases spending on the arts by $2 million and prohibits any spending on a wall. It was--gasp!--an old-fashioned bipartisan compromise, with Republicans getting more money for defense and homeland security. But conservatives were furious. Rush Limbaugh called the bill a "disaster." Members of the House Freedom Caucus said this wasn't the small-government tsunami they were promised.

That's the story of the Trump Revolution so far: big, disruptive promises, followed by confusion, wrangling in Congress and the courts--and only modest adjustments to the status quo.

The president's biggest campaign promises have mostly been stymied. There's been no repeal of Obamacare yet. (Obamacare will survive in some form.) No withdrawal from NAFTA. No trade war with China. No infrastructure plan to provide jobs for construction workers. No deportation force to go with the unbuilt wall.

Congress hasn't started on Trump's tax proposal yet, but it's already shrinking.

To be fair, the president's only just finished his first 100 days. Aides promise his big legislative push, including a real Trump budget, will come over the rest of the year. But they haven't explained why anyone should expect the results to be much different.

Meanwhile, Trump's showmanship has been exhausting to watch, just as it was during his presidential campaign. And he never breaks stride; in fact, he keeps musing publicly about other big things he might want to do. He startled his aides last week by telling Bloomberg News that he's "looking at" proposals to break up big banks and that he's open to raising the federal gas tax. Neither one looks likely.

So we need a Trump Rule to calm our nerves: Ignore every proposal he makes.

Trump doesn't pay attention to the details of his administration's plans, so why should you?

They're not going to go into effect in the form they first appear. They may not go into effect at all. Like the White House budget blueprint in March, they're about campaigning, not governing--declarations of attitude, not real legislative goals.

Most presidents husband their words carefully, don't make promises they can't keep, and don't make threats unless they intend to carry them out. Not Trump. He's devalued his own words.

Wall Street has figured that out. Last Monday, when Trump gave that surprising Bloomberg News interview, the financial markets ignored him. In fact, bank stocks closed up.

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Doyle McManus is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

Editorial on 05/07/2017

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