By Noah Rothman
Wednesday, July 31, 2024
The reason why political candidates who subject
themselves to a hostile reception from typically oppositional constituencies
generate goodwill from that exercise alone is because it entails risk. Walking
willingly into a minefield is an act of bravery. But if you step on a land mine
in the process, you’re still debilitated by it. Donald Trump deserves all the
credit in the world for sitting down with African-American reporters at the National
Association of Black Journalists conference knowing the deck was stacked
against him. But he stepped on a few land mines along the way.
The confrontational interview got off to a rocky start
when ABC News correspondent Rachel Scott opened with a monologue itemizing all
the reasons that some members of the NABJ boycotted Trump’s appearance. It was
a sandbagging from the start, but Trump took the bait. He bristled with offense
at the tone and framing of the question, called his interlocutor “nasty” and
her employer a “fake news network,” and he deemed the conduct of the
conference’s organizers and participants a “disaster.”
This dynamic — gloves-off Trump versus a hostile press
corps — enlivens partisans on both sides of the aisle. But this display is also
indicative of the kind of conduct that led a majority of Americans to say in
Trump’s third year in office that his behavior was “unpresidential.” With the general election upon us, the
goal of both campaigns is to appeal to the fickle middle of the electorate, the
members of which never reacted as favorably to Trump’s jousts with journalists
as Republicans do. Diving into the mud with ABC News’s Capitol Hill reporter
only raises her profile while lowering Trump’s.
The hits kept coming. When Trump was asked to explain the
charge that Kamala Harris is a “DEI hire,” Trump replied by asking her to
define “DEI.” She did not, but nor did Trump define his terms. Instead, he
pivoted to questioning Harris’s racial identity. “She was always of
Indian heritage,” Trump said. “And she was only promoting Indian heritage. I
didn’t know she was black until a number of years ago when she happened to turn
black, and now she wants to be known as black.”
“I respect either one,” Trump later added amid attendees’
jeers, but the gift he delivered to the Harris campaign’s doorstep will keep on
giving regardless of what the former president said after the newsy soundbite
he just crafted for Democrats concluded. Intrepid investigators will find deep
in the archives evidence that Harris has emphasized distinct aspects of her
biracial identity over the years, but good luck litigating that one,
Republicans. The vice president and her allies are more than eager to promote
Trump’s remarks for a wider audience, and Trump would be doing them a favor by
continuing to pull on that particular thread.
When pressed by Fox News Channel host Harris Faulkner if
Trump’s vice-presidential pick, Ohio Senator J. D. Vance, was “ready on Day
One” to ascend to the presidency, the context of the question was clear.
Vance’s debut in presidential politics has not gone well by objective as well as subjective metrics, but Trump’s answer
did little to reassure his supporters that he had faith in his second in
command.
“Historically, the vice president, in terms of the
election, does not have any impact. I mean, virtually no impact,” Trump
replied. “You’re voting for the president. And you could have a vice president
that’s outstanding in every way — and I think J. D. is, I think all of them
would have been — but you’re not voting that way. You’re voting for the
president. You’re voting for me.”
At no point did he say “yes” to the yes-or-no question.
In fact, his meandering response seemed to indicate that he, too, is filled
with doubt over Vance’s political acumen. It’s not as though Vance alone had
the qualities Trump sought in a potential successor. “All” the candidates on
his short list would have been great. And, after all, no one is voting for
Vance, right? Americans are well advised to focus on the top of the ticket to
the exclusion of his maladroit running mate. There’s a universe of subtext in
Trump’s response, but nowhere in that universe will you find an unalloyed vote
of confidence in the GOP’s vice-presidential nominee.
The members of the NABJ who are white-hot
with rage over Trump’s appearance on this panel are guilty of massaging
their own egos at the expense of their industry. The interview Trump subjected
himself to was one of the toughest he has sat through in a long time. The
moderators did a fine job, and Trump’s responses created new knowledge that
will help voters evaluate the choice before the country in America. That’s the
job, and these journalists did it well.
Trump’s appearance was not the total disaster his
detractors have made it out to be. And yet, whatever benefits Trump hoped to
receive from the effort will be mitigated by the stumbles he made in the
process — stumbles that will haunt his campaign.
The thing about going into the lion’s den is that
spelunkers run the risk of being eaten. Those who survive the experience are no
less brave than those who emerge from it hobbled. But, at the end of the day,
if the exercise weakens you, all the public sympathy in the world is still cold
comfort.
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