MSNBC (Opinion)
By Steve Benen
August 24, 2015
When
presidential candidates are asked to explain their positions on key
issues with details, but they have no idea what to say, they tend to
rely on some go-to nouns.
Ask Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) about his foreign policy, for example,
and he’ll talk a great deal about “strength.”
What
does that mean in practical terms? It means he’ll be “strong.” Which
will translate into what kind of policy, exactly? One based on
“strengthiness,” obviously.
New
Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R) has a similar habit, but for him the
word is “leadership.” Every problem, no matter how daunting, can be
addressed with a president
who is a leading leader who’s ready to lead through leadership. How
inspiring.
But
to fully appreciate this dynamic in action, consider what happened on
ABC yesterday morning, when George Stephanopoulos asked Donald Trump how
he intends to round
up and pay for the deportation of 11 million undocumented immigrants – a
number the Republican candidate said might be as high as 30 million.
STEPHANOPOULOS:
So if there’s no idea, how are you going to round them all up? Where
are you going to get the money, where are you going to get the forces?
Exactly how
are you going to do it? What are the specifics here?
TRUMP: George, it’s called management. And the first thing we have to do is secure the border. But it’s called management.
The
host pressed further, prompting the GOP candidate to again say, “It’s
management.” The more Stephanopoulos pressed for any kind of policy
detail, the more Trump responded,
“George, I’m telling you, it’s called management.”
Dismissing his 2016 rivals, the Republican added, “They don’t know management.”
In
all, during a fairly brief telephone interview, Trump used the word
“management” six times, and in each instance, it was in response to a
question about the lack of
substantive details in the candidate’s mass-deportation plan.
It was like watching a kid trying to convince a teacher he did his homework, despite the fact that he clearly did not.
Ordinarily,
this might seem like a problem for a national candidate hoping to
become the leader of the free world, but there’s clearly nothing
ordinary about Trump’s campaign.
In fact, watching yesterday’s exchange, I was reminded of NBC’s Katy
Tur telling Rachel on the show last week that she was covering a Trump
event in New Hampshire, “and kind of amazingly, Donald said that he
doesn’t think that people really want policy plans.
He thinks it’s the press that wants policy plans because the press are
the people that keep asking for it.”
It’s
a classic post-policy approach – don’t vote for me despite my lack of
policy specifics; vote for me because of my lack of policy specifics.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment