During a Thanksgiving teleconference with members of the military, Donald Trump repeated one of his favorite lines: “There’s no brand that’s gone up like the Coast Guard over the last couple of years.” Soon after, at a Coast Guard station near the president’s private club in South Florida, he said it again.
“I think nobody has gone up more than the Coast Guard, when you look at the hurricanes in Texas — in particular Texas, you saved so many people. But Texas and Florida, Puerto Rico, now North Carolina, South Carolina.
“But the job you’ve done is really fantastic. And there’s — nothing has gone — if you were doing the brand, they would say this is one of the great brand increases.”
In June, as hurricane season got underway, Trump traveled to FEMA headquarters for a briefing where he also said, “[I]n terms of increased branding, the brand of the Coast Guard has been something incredible what’s happened.”
It’s part of a lengthy pattern, which apparently started in September 2017, after the president addressed the federal response to Hurricane Irma. “If you talk about branding,” he said, despite the fact that no one was talking about branding, “no brand has improved more than the United States Coast Guard.”
Trump repeated the line again and again in the months that followed.
To be sure, I’m glad to see Trump sing the Coast Guard’s praises; those men and women have clearly earned the support. But it’s worth pausing to wonder why in the world he keeps saying this.
Circling back to our previous coverage, it’s easy to get the impression that the president personally had no idea what the Coast Guard does. When he says the Coast Guard’s brand “has improved,” what I think Trump is effectively saying is he didn’t fully appreciate what guardsmen and women do before taking office.









