President Donald Trump’s administration has become mired in embarrassment over his latest botched remodeling project, but according to a new analysis from MS NOW, the threats he has made in response to the affair reveal him as both “comical” and “ominous.”
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As part of his ongoing campaign to remodel iconic fixtures of Washington, D.C., to his own liking, Trump made a big deal out of his plan to have the Lincoln Memorial’s Reflecting Pool painted a color he called “American Flag Blue.” Once the project — handed off to a GOP donor through a swift no-bid contract — was completed, it promptly blew up in his face, as the pool became overrun with green algae, which numerous experts have said was actively made worse by the change in color.
Despite the administration’s efforts, the algae have remained, threatening to stick around as a highly visible embarrassment for Trump during the country’s 250th birthday celebrations. In response to this predicament, Trump has tried to save face by claiming that the algae bloom was caused by vandals, with a former Olympian getting arrested and charged by the U.S. Park Police after touching a piece of peeling paint in the Reflecting Pool. Multiple other people near the pool, whom Trump accused of being “vandals,” have also been arrested, though there have been no charges leveled against them.
Writing for MS NOW on Saturday, political strategist Symone Sanders-Townsend argued that “the ongoing debacle of the Reflecting Pool has been a helpful distillation of [Trump’s] approach” to governance: “Make a big promise, use it to reward your allies, blame setbacks on your opponents, criminalize dissent and then attack the press.”
“The first three steps are fairly common in politics, especially among populists with little experience in government,” she explained. “But it’s the last two that turn Trump into something more than just a run-of-the-mill incompetent politician. Authoritarianism often begins with the habit of treating ordinary problems as criminal conspiracies. A court strikes down his policy, and he calls the judge ‘crooked’ or ‘corrupt.’ A protest escalates, and he calls the protesters ‘paid agitators.’”
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She added: “If an authoritarian government cannot accept criticism, then it has to label critics enemies. If it cannot admit a mistake, then it has to blame sabotage. And if it cannot accept failure, then it has to find someone to punish.”
Sanders-Townsend further argued that while it may be “comical” to see Trump deploy this predictable authoritarian playbook over something like the Reflecting Pool debacle, it is also “ominous” and must be taken seriously. This sort of impulse, she explained, is exactly why the nation’s founders “built a system designed to restrain power rather than indulge it.”
“The Reflecting Pool is simply the latest reminder that, in Trump’s Washington, the line between politics and criminality is growing dangerously thin,” she continued. “That’s because the common thread is not just inflammatory rhetoric. It is the growing weaponization of government against ordinary political activity and the ordinary people who engage in it. When a president begins treating ordinary politics as criminality, it does not stay rhetorical for long. Eventually, someone gets investigated. Someone gets detained. Someone gets arrested.”
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