The Elites Attack What They Don’t Understand
by Newt Gingrich: It’s been nearly 14 months since President Trump took office, and the media and the Washington establishment still don’t understand our nation’s 45th President. They continue to criticize, distort, discredit, and ignore his actions and accomplishments, but they’ve made little to no effort to actually understand what he’s doing and the way he operates.
This has been the elites’ pattern since Trump first announced his bid for the White House, and it is actually what prompted me last year to write my #1 New York Times bestselling book Understanding Trump, which was released in paperback this week.
When President Trump withdrew the US from the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Paris Agreement, the elites could not see how breaking with these bad agreements could possibly be good for Americans. After all, some of the Washington elites had helped draft these deals — which in the minds of the liberal media, meant these deals must be good.
When President Trump imposed direct trade measures on some foreign-made products, including solar panels, steel, and aluminum to protect US industries that were being undercut, the elites reflexively questioned his political-trade-foreign relations acumen. Seemingly, none of the them stopped to consider that President Trump’s decades of success in international business may provide him with an informed opinion and worldview which are simply counter to their own.
As we have seen President Trump make changes to his Cabinet and personal staff, the elites in Washington and the national media have insisted that these decisions are a sign of dangerous instability in the White House. Never mind that the best business leaders and managers routinely make tough staffing decisions to improve their organizations’ long-run initiatives or mission.
It seems the elites simply refuse to think about the Trump presidency through any lens other than that of traditional Washington – despite the fact that President Trump has never been a part of (and represents a departure from) traditional establishment. This confused, square peg-round hole analytical approach is made worse by the fact that the elites then try to use Washington jargon to define and attack the President.
In their minds, President Trump doesn’t fit the post-World War II international mold that regards the United States as the world’s only real super-power that can afford to prop up all its allies – and even some of its enemies. For that, the elites claim President Trump is an isolationist.
Trump doesn’t fit the traditional Republican free-trader mold because he demands that Americans must benefit from trade agreements, too. Therefore, according to the elites, he must be a protectionist.
The President didn’t enter office with a team of politicos and policy wonks who had been with him through a decades-long political career, so to the elites insist the Trump Administration is inexperienced.
Finally, President Trump is not afraid to take decisive action when he’s made up his mind about something, so the elites claim he is unstable.
However, many Americans hear these Washington words (isolationist, protectionist, inexperienced, unstable) and see no relationship to their President or his administration.
Many Americans, who for years watched factories close and American prosperity dwindle as a result of bad multinational agreements and unfair trade deals, regard President Trump’s decision to get out of the TPP and the Paris Agreement as necessary and long over-due. To them, the President has been working to break away from deals that help other countries at the expense of US success – just as any good business executive would.
Similarly, they see the President taking actions to stop foreign countries that are cheating at trade as a sign that he is defending the interests of our country abroad. That’s also what good business leaders do.
When President Trump replaces one of his team members with someone more in-tune with his vision, most Americans see him acting as a typical, goal-oriented executive.
In Understanding Trump, I point out that Trump defeated the media and Washington elite largely because they simply refused to understand him as a candidate. Further, they were profoundly wrong about the 2016 election because they couldn’t comprehend that the American people wanted something other than the traditional Washington elites’ idea of a president.
It seems the elites didn’t read my book – or they didn’t take its lessons to heart – because they haven’t changed a bit. They still don’t understand Trump.
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Newt Gingrich is a former Georgia Congressman and Speaker of the U.S. House. He co-authored and was the chief architect of the "Contract with America" and a major leader in the Republican victory in the 1994 congressional elections. He is noted speaker and writer. The above commentary was shared via Gingrich Productions.
Tags: Newt Gingrich, commentary, Elites, Attack, What They Don’t Understand To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and "Like" Facebook Page - Thanks!
This has been the elites’ pattern since Trump first announced his bid for the White House, and it is actually what prompted me last year to write my #1 New York Times bestselling book Understanding Trump, which was released in paperback this week.
When President Trump withdrew the US from the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Paris Agreement, the elites could not see how breaking with these bad agreements could possibly be good for Americans. After all, some of the Washington elites had helped draft these deals — which in the minds of the liberal media, meant these deals must be good.
When President Trump imposed direct trade measures on some foreign-made products, including solar panels, steel, and aluminum to protect US industries that were being undercut, the elites reflexively questioned his political-trade-foreign relations acumen. Seemingly, none of the them stopped to consider that President Trump’s decades of success in international business may provide him with an informed opinion and worldview which are simply counter to their own.
As we have seen President Trump make changes to his Cabinet and personal staff, the elites in Washington and the national media have insisted that these decisions are a sign of dangerous instability in the White House. Never mind that the best business leaders and managers routinely make tough staffing decisions to improve their organizations’ long-run initiatives or mission.
It seems the elites simply refuse to think about the Trump presidency through any lens other than that of traditional Washington – despite the fact that President Trump has never been a part of (and represents a departure from) traditional establishment. This confused, square peg-round hole analytical approach is made worse by the fact that the elites then try to use Washington jargon to define and attack the President.
In their minds, President Trump doesn’t fit the post-World War II international mold that regards the United States as the world’s only real super-power that can afford to prop up all its allies – and even some of its enemies. For that, the elites claim President Trump is an isolationist.
Trump doesn’t fit the traditional Republican free-trader mold because he demands that Americans must benefit from trade agreements, too. Therefore, according to the elites, he must be a protectionist.
The President didn’t enter office with a team of politicos and policy wonks who had been with him through a decades-long political career, so to the elites insist the Trump Administration is inexperienced.
Finally, President Trump is not afraid to take decisive action when he’s made up his mind about something, so the elites claim he is unstable.
However, many Americans hear these Washington words (isolationist, protectionist, inexperienced, unstable) and see no relationship to their President or his administration.
Many Americans, who for years watched factories close and American prosperity dwindle as a result of bad multinational agreements and unfair trade deals, regard President Trump’s decision to get out of the TPP and the Paris Agreement as necessary and long over-due. To them, the President has been working to break away from deals that help other countries at the expense of US success – just as any good business executive would.
Similarly, they see the President taking actions to stop foreign countries that are cheating at trade as a sign that he is defending the interests of our country abroad. That’s also what good business leaders do.
When President Trump replaces one of his team members with someone more in-tune with his vision, most Americans see him acting as a typical, goal-oriented executive.
In Understanding Trump, I point out that Trump defeated the media and Washington elite largely because they simply refused to understand him as a candidate. Further, they were profoundly wrong about the 2016 election because they couldn’t comprehend that the American people wanted something other than the traditional Washington elites’ idea of a president.
It seems the elites didn’t read my book – or they didn’t take its lessons to heart – because they haven’t changed a bit. They still don’t understand Trump.
----------------------
Newt Gingrich is a former Georgia Congressman and Speaker of the U.S. House. He co-authored and was the chief architect of the "Contract with America" and a major leader in the Republican victory in the 1994 congressional elections. He is noted speaker and writer. The above commentary was shared via Gingrich Productions.
Tags: Newt Gingrich, commentary, Elites, Attack, What They Don’t Understand To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and "Like" Facebook Page - Thanks!
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