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Cillizza: Trump's London tweets prove he's not presidential
The London terror tweets prove Donald Trump is never going to be 'presidential'
(CNN)Soon after word of two terror attacks in London broke late Saturday, Donald Trump began to offer his thoughts.
Did
he release a statement offering condolences to the victims? Did he
grant an interview with a TV network to insist that the US remains
resolute in our fight against terror even in the wake of these latest
attacks? Nope! He tweeted! Five times, to be exact.
On
Saturday night, Trump kicked off his tweetstorm with this: "We need to
be smart, vigilant and tough. We need the courts to give us back our
rights. We need the Travel Ban as an extra level of safety!"
Then
he offered this tweet: "Whatever the United States can do to help out
in London and the U. K., we will be there - WE ARE WITH YOU. GOD BLESS!"
After a night's sleep, Trump woke up Sunday morning and, around 8 a.m., fired off three more tweets.
"We
must stop being politically correct and get down to the business of
security for our people. If we don't get smart it will only get worse,"
Trump started.
"At least 7 dead and 48 wounded in terror attack and Mayor of London says there is "no reason to be alarmed!," he continued.
"Do you notice we are not having a gun debate right now? That's because they used knives and a truck!," he ended.
Of
those five, one is the sort of thing you can imagine a president not
named Donald Trump saying in the wake of a major terrorism event like
the one in London; that's the second one Saurday night in which he
pledges to help London in whatever way they need it and insists America
stands with them.
The other four tweets are pure Trump -- and the exact opposite of what we have long considered "presidential."
In
one -- the first he sends out -- he uses the just-breaking terror
attacks as a way to make the case for his travel ban, which continues to
be hung up in the courts.
In another, he suggests political correctness is responsible for the attack, a common Trump refrain during the campaign.
In a third, he takes on those pushing gun control -- noting that they are silent because these attacks didn't involve guns.
And,
finally and most Trumpian, he attacks the mayor of London, Sadiq Khan,
for allegedly insisting that the people of London have "no reason to be
alarmed."
As is often the case with Trump, he has taken that comment from Khan heavily out of context.
In a statement, Khan said: "Londoners will see an increased police
presence today and over the course of the next few days. There's no
reason to be alarmed. One of the things the police and all of us need to
do is ensure that we're as safe as we possibly can be."
Khan
is clearly referring not to the threat from terrorists but to the
increased police presence when he uses the words "no reason to be
alarmed." Trump chooses to misunderstand him for political purposes.
Trump
tweeting things to forward his own agenda in the wake of terrorist
attacks is nothing new. Following shootings in an Orlando nightclub that
left 49 people dead, Trump offered this: "Appreciate the congrats for
being right on radical Islamic terrorism, I don't want congrats, I want
toughness & vigilance. We must be smart!" After an incident of a
knife-wielding man at the Louvre Museum in Paris, Trump tweeted: "A new
radical Islamic terrorist has just attacked in Louvre Museum in Paris.
Tourists were locked down. France on edge again. GET SMART U.S."
In
short, the tweetstorm following the London attacks isn't the exception,
it's the rule for Trump. Using these attacks to prove his political
point is his default position not a one-time popping off.
Trump's
responses are the latest example of how he is radically altering the
idea of what it means to be "presidential." During the 2016 campaign,
Trump's attacks on John McCain's war hero status, his savaging of a Gold
Star family, his wild exaggerations about his wealth and his seeming
disinterest in the truth were all taken, at one point or another, as
signs that he simply wasn't "presidential" enough to actually win
anything. That, while voters liked his unorthodox style, they would
eventually tire of him as they looked for the sort of statesman who had
traditionally held the nation's top political job.
It
didn't happen. And Trump has never stopped. His quintet of tweets on
London are not only something that no previous American president would
ever have said, they're also statements that it's hard to imagine any
other leader in any other democracy around the world saying.
They
are more the statements of a conservative talk radio show host than
they are of what we have come to think of as a president -- bombastic,
over the top and out of context. They are, by traditional standards,
anti-presidential.
Which,
come to think of it, is a good way to describe Trump. He is sort of an
anti-president -- at least in terms of how we have always defined those
terms. Trump's attitude and approach in office is closer to Jerry
Springer than to Gerald Ford. He's more Limbaugh than Lincoln.
What
we know: Trump isn't going to stop Trumping. The only question now is
whether voters want an anti-president as their president.
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