Nearly two weeks into the longest government shutdown in American history, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), one of Congress’ most high profile Donald Trump loyalists, made an unfortunate prediction.
“If he gives in now, that’s the end of 2019 in terms of him being an effective president,” Graham said on the Jan. 2 edition of Sean Hannity’s Fox News program, where he knew Trump would see his comments. “That’s probably the end of his presidency.”
Of course, the South Carolinian has an odd habit of making overwrought predictions, and it’s not too surprising that he’s facing some mockery over those comments now. But there’s a different quote from one of Graham’s colleagues that struck me as equally notable. Bloomberg News reported on Jan. 16:
GOP Senator John Kennedy dismissed a bipartisan effort to urge President Donald Trump to open the government for several weeks to clear the way for talks on border security.
“You know when that’s going to happen? When you look outside your window and see donkeys fly,” said Kennedy of Louisiana. “It’s not going to happen.”
“You can have your own opinions about President Trump, but I think most fair-minded people would have to agree he’s a smart man. And he’s not going to agree to open it back up and then have Speaker Pelosi say, ‘Thank you very much, you get nothing.’”
Nine days later, that’s exactly what happened. The Louisiana Republican’s assessment was exactly backwards: putting aside the president’s intellectual limitations, he agreed to re-open the government for a few weeks, even as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi ensured that Trump received nothing.
Whether or not anyone saw flying donkeys is unclear.
My point is not to poke fun at Kennedy or Graham for assessments they probably wish they could take back. Rather, what’s of interest at this point is what, if anything, Republicans have learned from their recent experience. Both Senate Republicans offered specific and unambiguous predictions based on what they assumed to be true about the president, his plans, and his capacity for following through.
Do they now know better? Shouldn’t they?
With that in mind, consider some of what Trump’s GOP should understand now, even if they were unclear before the president’s surrender on Friday afternoon:
1. Trump doesn’t know what he’s doing. No, really, he has no idea what he’s doing. The president stumbled into a government shutdown because he was afraid of upsetting some far-right media personalities, and in the weeks that followed, Trump demonstrated a total inability to think even one step ahead. He made painfully clear over the course of five weeks that he doesn’t know how to negotiate, he doesn’t know how to persuade, and he doesn’t bother to keep up on the most basic details on the policy dispute he initiated. Trump assured his allies he had “a plan.” He didn’t.









