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Author: albaby1 🐝 HONORARY
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Number: of 75974 
Subject: Trump is Good at Being Bad at Presidenting
Date: 01/22/26 4:28 PM
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...or, "What's All This About Greenland, Now?"


Once upon a time, back on the old Fool website, there was a lot of talk about Donald Trump's first term, both about what he was doing (lots of disruption!) and not getting done ("Infrastructure Week!"). In some of those discussions, I frequently made the observation that Trump was bad at Presidenting.

That wasn't a judgement on whether his policies were good or bad. Just that he wasn't doing a very good job of the mechanics of getting his preferences implemented. His Administration was bad at getting regulations drafted, they were constantly having regulations overturned in court for stupid procedural issues, he had little success in getting his proposals through Congress (like the Wall!), and generally wasn't doing an especially efficient job of working the levers of power.

I was reminded of that when I read an interview between Ezra Klein and conservative Yuval Levin, where Levin argues that Trump is failing to use most of the powers of the Presidency, and as such isn't likely to have as much durable impact on America as one might think given how central he seems to be in every news cycle. In trying to find that interview, I came across an Atlantic article he recently wrote where he makes the same claim. Here it is in a nutshell:

I actually think that’s not quite right and that there’s an important story to tell about the absence of action in the past year, too — the absence of traditional uses of presidential power and authority in our system.

There has been very little legislation. It’s true the “big, beautiful bill” is law, but Donald Trump has signed fewer pieces of legislation than any president in the modern era.

The pace of regulatory action is actually slower than the last five or six presidents. If you look at the numbers, the amount that they’re doing that amounts to durable policy change is actually pretty constrained.

So I think the question is: How do you reconcile the amount of activity with the absence of durable action?



Thinking about those two things, it seems to me that Trump is still very bad at Presidenting. But I think he is much more aware that there are parts of the job that he's not very well suited for and parts that fit him to a T. And he's doing an outstanding job of focusing on the tools of the Presidency that do suit him.

So he's not messing around with drafting regulations, which require both doing a lot of homework and running through all the fiddly procedural gantlets. He's not messing around with legislation, which requires working with people who don't listen to you and soothing other people's egos and finding win-win-win outcomes instead of just dominating a counterparty.

And Levin is right that these are the tools that make durable policy change. Presidential terms end. And your successor can simply undo everything you did while you were President by just reversing all your EO's and directions to staff. But the United States Code and the Federal Register live on. If you want to make policy changes that last for years, even generations, you would normally look to passing legislation and changing the regulations. And Trump isn't paying much attention to those things.

What Trump has been adept at doing is finding changes he can make using the more ephemeral power of "I'm the President right now" that can't be undone. He's not bothering to change the Immigration and Naturalization Act, or any of the regulations that implement it - he's just going out and trying to throw out as many undocumented immigrants as possible, and that can't be undone easily. He's not setting up a committee to evaluate the East Wing architecture - he just goes out and tears it down. Go out and get a new Air Force One, build yourself a monument, depose Nicolas Maduro. The "Board of Peace." He's good at bullying counterparties, especially if they're weaker than him. But he's finding a lot of things that will have lasting impacts that go on even once the bullying has stopped. These are things that use the current power of the President to do things that will have impacts long after he's left office that don't require Congress.

Which brings us to Greenland. Greenland would be huge. The U.S. hasn't expanded its territory in any significant in nearly a century. Adding Greenland? Bigger than Alaska. Bigger (by area) than the Louisiana Purchase. The kind of thing that lasts. I think that's part of why he's focused on it. It's something he can do with the powers of the Presidency he's skilled at wielding (the true Executive powers, not writing rules or laws) that doesn't suffer from the ephemeral nature of most of those actions.

That's why I say he's good at being bad at Presidenting. I think this is a deliberate choice on his part, to focus his energy on the tools of the Presidency that work for him, and to have his agenda be what he can do with those tools rather than try to accomplish things with tools he's not adept with.


https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/16/opinion/ezra-kl...
https://archive.ph/74Eiw#selection-687.43-691.393
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Author: marco100   😊 😞
Number: of 75974 
Subject: Re: Trump is Good at Being Bad at Presidenting
Date: 01/22/26 4:40 PM
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Some soothsayers believe that the most profound and lasting effect a President can have on the country is by who he gets the Senate to put onto the Supreme Court.

Guess you don't agree with that.

That doesn't count. Cause Trump.

Huge tax cuts, made permanent in his 2nd term. That will directly affect LOTS of people. That doesn't count either, cause Trump.

Then you actually say Trump didn't try to change immigration laws and regulation. "All he is doing is enforcing them."

That's wrong because?

Yeah cause Trump.

Again.

Greenland? Before Trump no one cared about it and it was nowhere in public discourse. Now NATO and everyone else seem to be very focused on it.

That too doesn't count.

Cause Trump.

But then albaby1 you're always right about everything, especially when it comes to critizing Trump.

Cause.

Trump.
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Author: Steve203 🐝  😊 😞
Number: of 75974 
Subject: Re: Trump is Good at Being Bad at Presidenting
Date: 01/22/26 4:50 PM
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That's why I say he's good at being bad at Presidenting. I think this is a deliberate choice on his part, to focus his energy on the tools of the Presidency that work for him, and to have his agenda be what he can do with those tools rather than try to accomplish things with tools he's not adept with.

I think it's simpler than that. He has always been about pasting his name on everything, to glorify himself. He doesn't do the "President" thing, because he was born as the CEO of a closely held company. He is used to being a dictator.

Two things are different, vs his first term. SCOTUS held that he can't be charged with a crime, as long as he is POTUS, so the only remedy is impeachment. As Schiff said of his coup attempt, "if this isn't impeachable, nothing is", but he was not convicted, so impeachment is not a constraint either.

So we have a typical "JC", unaccountable to anyone, doing as he pleases, to enrich and glorify himself.

Recall the words of his defense counsel, in the second impeachment: words to the effect "The President sets policy in the national interest, as he sees it. If a President decides it is in the national interest to ignore an election, and stay in power, it's OK". Trump will be President for life.

Steve
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Author: albaby1 🐝 HONORARY
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Number: of 75974 
Subject: Re: Trump is Good at Being Bad at Presidenting
Date: 01/22/26 5:04 PM
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I think it's simpler than that. He has always been about pasting his name on everything, to glorify himself. He doesn't do the "President" thing, because he was born as the CEO of a closely held company. He is used to being a dictator.

Right. That's exactly my point. There are different levers of power that come with the office of President. Different "tools" you can use.

One tool is that you have absolute command of the Executive. That's the tool that fits really well with Trump's skill set. It's a good match for his personality.

Other tools are being able to draft regulations, and being able to push legislation through Congress. Those tools aren't great matches for his skill set, and he was quite inefficient at using them in his first term.

The major downside of using the first tool - the absolute command of the Executive - is that it's temporary. It's ephemeral. It lasts only as long as your term does. It's very hard to use it to create any kind of lasting change. Most things you do with it can simply be undone by your successor.

I think it's interesting that Trump has really shifted away from using the other tools of the office, and is focusing so much more of his energy on the tool. I think it's a deliberate choice by him. Even if you characterize him as a dictator, he's not trying to exercise dictatorial powers through the channels that are most likely to have lasting duration - he's doing it through the most ephemeral channel, but targeting things where even if the duration of the action is short the effect will last a very long time.
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Author: Steve203 🐝  😊 😞
Number: of 75974 
Subject: Re: Trump is Good at Being Bad at Presidenting
Date: 01/22/26 5:29 PM
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Right. That's exactly my point. There are different levers of power that come with the office of President. Different "tools" you can use.

I don't think Trump the Great and Perfect is using tools in the Presidential toolkit, unless you include John Yoo's "unitary executive" theory that the POTUS has powers that are *not* enumerated in the Constitution, even though the Constitution says the POTUS has *only* the powers enumerated.

I think it's interesting that Trump has really shifted away from using the other tools of the office,

He has no need to use any of the normal tools of the office, because he knows he is not accountable to anyone.

he's doing it through the most ephemeral channel,

To believe that, you would need to believe that the US would recover to where it was in the 1970s, as a for instance. I don't see that happening, ever. He will build monuments to himself, both physical and legal, that will endure.

Steve
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Author: commonone 🐝🐝 BRONZE
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Number: of 75974 
Subject: Re: Trump is Good at Being Bad at Presidenting
Date: 01/22/26 5:45 PM
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albaby1: It's ephemeral. It lasts only as long as your term does. It's very hard to use it to create any kind of lasting change. Most things you do with it can simply be undone by your successor.

Awww, you think the Pedophile Protector is going to willingly relinquish his office.

That's so cute.
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Author: onepoorguy   😊 😞
Number: of 75974 
Subject: Re: Trump is Good at Being Bad at Presidenting
Date: 01/22/26 6:06 PM
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That's why I say he's good at being bad at Presidenting. I think this is a deliberate choice on his part,...

I have to disagree with the "deliberate choice". I think it's more a narcissistic imperative that he is "perfect", and all that we see comes from that. It's not what he chooses, it's who he is.

Other than that, I can't argue too much with the post. I only quibble about it being a "choice". It isn't. It's who he is, period.
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Author: albaby1 🐝 HONORARY
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Number: of 75974 
Subject: Re: Trump is Good at Being Bad at Presidenting
Date: 01/22/26 7:02 PM
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I don't think Trump the Great and Perfect is using tools in the Presidential toolkit, unless you include John Yoo's "unitary executive" theory that the POTUS has powers that are *not* enumerated in the Constitution, even though the Constitution says the POTUS has *only* the powers enumerated.

That's not what the unitary executive theory involves, and it's not really germane to my point. He is primarily using the "control over the Executive branch" tool to achieve his goal.

For example, suppose Trump wants to get colleges to change the way they do things. He could do one of a few things:

1) Amend the Higher Education Act of 1965 to make the colleges do what he wants them to do.
2) Promulgate regulations under the Education Act to make the colleges do what he wants them to do.
3) Stop giving them the money they would receive under federal grants until they do what he wants.

The first tool requires Congress, the second tool requires going through the hoops of the Administrative Procedure Act, but the last only requires Trump to tell his subordinates to make it so. Trump is mostly choosing #3. Levin's point is that using tool #3 is the least durable - the policy lasts only as long as Trump is in office.

My point is that I think Trump is finding things he can do with tool #3 that can last well beyond his term. The exercise of the tool only lasts another 36 months. But if you do things with it like depose Maduro, annex Greenland, set up a new rival to the UN that you and your buddies control, etc. - you can have an impact that does last beyond your term in a way that normal exercise of Executive control does not.
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Author: albaby1 🐝 HONORARY
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Number: of 75974 
Subject: Re: Trump is Good at Being Bad at Presidenting
Date: 01/22/26 7:07 PM
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I have to disagree with the "deliberate choice". I think it's more a narcissistic imperative that he is "perfect", and all that we see comes from that. It's not what he chooses, it's who he is.

Oh, I don't mean to suggest he's engaging in deep introspective contemplation. He's choosing what he does based on who he is, not because he's leading an examined life. But he is choosing to largely forego the typical tools of Presidential power in favor of just using his control over the day-to-day of the Executive branch.
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