The White House dimmed the lights during yesterday’s press briefing so that Donald Trump could present a campaign-style video intended to put the president in a flattering light. It featured, among other things, some public praise from governors, including blue-state Democrats.
“He returns calls, he reaches out, he’s been proactive,” California’s Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom said of Trump in a clip. “His team is on it. They’ve been responsive — late at night, early in the morning — and they’ve thus far been doing everything that they can do, and I want to say thank you,” New York’s Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo said in another.
It’s true that Newsom and Cuomo made these comments. I rather doubt that they intended for their remarks to be used in Republican political advertising, but the quotes are real.
That said, watching the video, I found myself thinking about Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
As Trump’s impeachment crisis rocked the White House, one of the more common arguments from the president and his allies was that Zelensky, at least publicly, had nothing but positive things to say about his American counterpart. To hear Zelensky tell it, he didn’t mind Trump’s extortion scheme, and he never felt threatened.
But as regular readers know, there was a highly relevant context surrounding the Ukrainian leader’s perspective: Zelensky was in a vulnerable position and was heavily dependent on support from the White House. With this in mind, the president in Kyiv had a powerful incentive to stay in Trump’s good graces.









