Donald Trump may be currently ahead of his GOP rivals in the polls, but I think he’s shrinking. As his fickle, reactionary base grows restive and more radical and the law closes around him, Trump has drawn his accomplishments in around himself like an aging matron clutches at a tatty shawl. He’s pantomiming the same old manic exaggerations and empty boasts, but if you listen closely, you’ll hear the whisper of a deflating air bag.
Surprisingly, he’s the one poking the holes.
To stave off legal jeopardy and give himself a chance at the presidency in 2024, Trump has found a strange form of humility — admitting to areas where he has no power, de-emphasizing accomplishment he used to make central to his resume, and (sometimes accidentally) copping to major errors in judgment.
Trump may be currently ahead of his GOP rivals in the polls, but I think he’s shrinking.
Monday’s Fox News interview with Bret Baier was case in point. The former president presented conflicting and tortured justifications for hanging onto all those boxes of classified documents that didn’t belong to him. Legal analysts, including one at Fox News, have pointed out that when the answers were not self-incriminating, they were incoherent. They were also very sad.
Take his protestation that the papers he possessed were not, in fact, important “documents.” It was just trash, really: “A massive amount of paper,” he said, mixed in with golf shirts, pants and even shoes.
Special counsel Jack Smith has alleged — and a taped recording seems to confirm — that Trump also kept a classified document detailing military plans for a hypothetical invasion of Iran somewhere in there. On behalf of the National Archives’ sake, I hope everything’s clean. Pressed more, Trump eventually backtracked and denied even the existence of the Iran document.
Trump is now also scrambling to recast even genuine successes, such as his Covid vaccine initiative “Operation Warp Speed,” which helped distribute millions of doses of vaccines before eventually “limping to the finish,” according to Politico. Today, though, an alarming number of his former/maybe base believe the Covid vaccine is a Bill Gates project to turn them into AI-generated groomers. (More seriously — indeed, deadly seriously — polls show increasing vaccine hesitancy, about all vaccines, among conservative voters.)
At a campaign stop in Iowa, a potential caucus-goer bemoaned that “we have lost people because you supported the jab.” Trump refused to take full credit for the actual medicine, making it sound like he helped make way for a life-saving treatment on a dare: “Everyone wanted a vaccine at that time, and I was able to do something that nobody else could have done.”








