There was a great deal wrong with Donald Trump’s 2016 candidacy, but among the most conspicuous problems was the Republican’s deliberate decision to avoid any focus on governing and policy details. Most candidates at least pretend to care about presenting voters with a substantive vision, but Team Trump practically flaunted its indifference.
One of the future president’s top policy advisers said at the time that voters would be “bored to tears” if the GOP campaign focused on governing. Trump himself insisted “the public doesn’t care” about public policy, which came on the heels of a campaign insider saying Trump didn’t want to “waste time on policy.”
As MSNBC’s Chris Hayes summarized in September 2016, the prospect of a Trump presidency was, for all intents and purposes, a “black box.” The host added, “No one, probably not even Trump, knows what the hell it looks like.”
Four years later, the then-incumbent president was no better. Trump was repeatedly asked, even on conservative media, about his policy priorities for a second term, and in each instance, he bungled the question. At one point, when the issue came up during a Fox News interview, the Republican boasted that he “would do new things” in a second term — but he failed to identify what any of those “new things” might be.
Eventually, Team Trump released a 50-point bulleted list of post-election priorities, but as we discussed soon after, to call the list an agenda would be far too generous: It included goals such as “return to normal in 2021.” The items on the list hardly counted as half-written tweets, much less elements of a presidential governing agenda.
As Election Day neared, Joe Biden’s campaign website featured relatively detailed proposals on 46 policy areas. As I noted in my book, Trump’s website featured literally zero policy plans and didn’t bother with an issues page.
The good news is, as part of his 2024 candidacy, the Republican has some relatively specific ideas about what he’d do with power if voters return him to the White House, and the electorate will have ample opportunity to assess them on the merits. The bad news is, those ideas are fundamentally at odds with how the United States government is supposed to function.
I’m not talking about the direct-to-camera videos featuring weird campaign promises that Trump periodically releases. The clips videos have all the sophistication of bumper stickers written in crayon.









