Archive for the ‘Donald Trump’ Category

Comedy Central’s Donald Trump Talk Show Is Here – Huffington Post

The President Show is Comedy Centrals new bet that theres a sizable American audience craving to watch a buffoonish illustration of President Donald Trump.

Certainly mere existence of the show, itself debuting in the wake ofAlec Baldwins popular Saturday Night Live impersonations, has proven some sort of market for self-help comedy consumption. But the new, half-hour President Showis a next level of commitment to making fun of the man in the Oval Office.

After weeks of hype, the show finally premiered Thursday night.In a continuation of his live performances with the Upright Citizens Brigade, comedian Anthony Atamanuik gives audiences what is arguablythe most spot-on Trump parodyof the moment.

To see for yourself, catch a segment last nights show above, where the fictional Trump rates various figures in the news as either NICE! or NOT NICE!

French politician Marine Le Pen got NICE!

Shes French, shes blonde and she hates Muslims, explained Atamanuiks Trump. Shes a triple threat.

Ivanka Trump also got NICE! due to her skin being like Italian marble. After sheillicited boos while defending her father to a German audience earlier this week, however, the German people earned a solid NOT NICE!

This is the worst thing the Germans have ever done, Atamanuik said. Ever. Ever done. Ever.

One moment hopefully hinted at more informative segments of the show, rather than beat-by-beat jokes about the weeks news, when Atamanuik went after White House press secretary Sean Spicer as both NOT NICE!and NICE!

Hes a muttering slobber-mouth with a taste for his own foot, Atamanuik explained, before showing a news clip about the real Trump not firing Spicer because of the press secretarys impressive ratings. This blending of a more nuanced recap of the week amid the easy Trump jokes could certainly be a sign of good things to come.

You can watch the full episode at Comedy Centrals website. Catch a teaser for the show, in which Atamanuiks Trump describes how his show is actually a better version of Franklin Roosevelts fireside chats, below:

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Comedy Central's Donald Trump Talk Show Is Here - Huffington Post

Donald Trump’s Art Of The Retreat – Huffington Post

WASHINGTON Just three months into his presidency, Donald Trumps bestselling The Art of the Deal might be due for a sequel: The Humility of the Failed Bluff.

The boastful businessman who claimed that his negotiating skills were unsurpassed appears to have met his match a number of times already.

Trump went from accusing the Chinese of manipulating their currency to agreeing that they didnt. He has not made any visible progress in forcing Mexico to pay for a border wall. He was talked out of abandoning the North American Free Trade Agreement by the leaders of Mexico and Canada. And he was unable to bully Democrats into working with him to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

He has folded like a lawn chair at the slightest hint of pressure, and hes getting played like a violin by enemies like Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong Un, said Adam Jentleson, former deputy chief of staff to retired Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid of Nevada.

In Mexico, the country Trump has vilified since the start of his campaign nearly two years ago, a senator told The New York Times that political leaders there have started to see Trump primarily as a bluffer.

In front of a bluffer, you always have to maintain a firm and dignified position, Armando Ros Pitertold the Times.

Some Trump supporters challenge that view. Michael Caputo, a western New York political consultant who worked for Trumps primary campaign last year, said Ros and others who underestimate Trump will be sorry.

Bluffers win. And they win big, Caputo said. At the end of the poker game that the senator is speaking about, well end up with more chips. The senator is going to be awful surprised and out of the game early.

But other Trump allies, including radio talk-show host Rush Limbaugh, are starting to fret about Trumps strategy. Im not happy to have to pass this on, Limbaughtold his listenersearlier this week. But it looks like, from here, right here, right now, it looks like President Trump is caving on his demand for a measly $1 billion in the budget for his wall on the border with Mexico.

On the campaign trail, Trump marketed himself as the ultimate closer, a tough-talking businessman who could renegotiate trade deals and international agreements to better benefit the American worker. He regularly disparaged weak and stupid leaders in Washington for failing to accomplish what someone who had actually sat at a boardroom table could easily do once in the Oval Office.

Jonathan Drake / Reuters

Ive watched the politicians. Ive dealt with them all my life, Trumpsaidin 2015. If you cant make a good deal with a politician, then theres something wrong with you. Youre certainly not very good.

Nearly 100 days into his presidency, however, Trump appears to be finding the job is much tougher than he imagined. He has issued bold ultimatums in negotiations on health care, immigration and trade only to have to back down. While his predecessor once said henever bluffedon the world stage, Trump has embraced the risky tactic on both foreign and domestic fronts with little to show for it.

People put in for the TV character of Donald Trump, a hyper-confident negotiator, a wheeler-dealer mogul, said GOP strategist Rick Wilson. The real Donald Trump is a 70-year-old man who inherited a bunch of money whos been bankrupt four times and who basically turned into a branding company. Hes intellectually sloppy and temperamentally unsuited for the job.

In the health care debate, Trump has been all over the map. He first warned Republican lawmakers that he would leave the Affordable Care Act in place and move on to other priorities unless they approved a bill to repeal and replace it. The ultimatum failed to sway skeptical conservatives in the House, and lawmakers bolted town for a two-week recess without voting on the measure. He and his aides then threatened toreach out to Democratsto resuscitate his stalled agenda, but that too went out the window. This week, the administration is once again pushing for a party-line vote on an Obamacare repeal bill.

Trumps bluster toward Democrats also fell flat. Earlier this month, hethreatened to sabotage Obamacareif they didnt agree to proposed changes regarding the law. White House budget director Mick Mulvaney announcedWednesdaythat the administration was considering cutting off crucial payments to health insurance companies a move thatwould be devastatingfor people who buy coverage on their own, rather than through employers. Later that day, less than 48 hours before a crucial government funding deadline, Trump backed down and said hewould honor the payments after all.

Trump didnt fare any better on funding his proposed border wall, either. Facing likely odds of a government shutdown, the president on Tuesday backed off demands that Democrats agree to fund the construction of a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border the same wall he said Mexico would pay for on the campaign trail. Trump maintained that the wall remained a priority and that it would eventually get built. But its hard to see what more he could do to persuade Democrats to vote to fund the wall between now and the next round of budget talks in September.

That issue, because it was a promise repeated throughout his campaign, could do Trump serious damage if he doesnt deliver, said Ari Fleischer, a press secretary to former President George W. Bush.

I think Trump must demonstrate this year, not necessarily now, progress toward building the wall or his base will be disappointed, Fleischer said. He went too far in saying Mexico will pay for it, but I believe his base cares far more about it being built and a lot less about who pays.

Trumps efforts to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement may yet bear fruit. His threat to pull the U.S. out of the agreement brought Canada and Mexico to the negotiating table this week. But its less clear what kind of concessions hell be able to wring out of them. Even Trump admitted that withdrawing from the trade pact would amount to a shock to the system.

If Im unable to make a fair deal for the United States, meaning a fair deal for our workers and our companies, I will terminate NAFTA. But were going to give renegotiation a good, strong shot, he said at the White House on Thursday.

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Donald Trump's Art Of The Retreat - Huffington Post

Donald Trump has spent 97 days in constant motion. But what has he actually done? – CNN

If he's not tweeting about something or hosting members of Congress at the White House, he's huddled with a foreign leader at Mar-a-Lago or putting his John Hancock on some executive action or order.

Or boasting about how much he's gotten done. "No administration has accomplished more in the first 90 days," Trump said earlier this month.

The truth is more nuanced and less favorable to Trump. Yes, Trump has been moving almost non-stop for his first 97 days as president. But, movement is not accomplishment. And, any analysis of Trump's first 97 days makes clear there has been much more of the former and much less of the latter.

Consider this: The single, large-scale accomplishment of the Trump administration to date is the nomination and confirmation of Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court.

Now, that is a biggie. Gorsuch will likely remain on the Court for decades to come.

But, aside from the Court nomination, there's precious little that Trump has pro-actively accomplished on his agenda. He has signed two dozen executive orders and issued a series of presidential proclamations. By and large, those moves are aimed at rolling back initiatives begun under his predecessor President Barack Obama -- with a particular focus on the environment -- not on proactively pushing Trump's broader agenda. (An argument can -- and will -- be made by Trump forces that in undoing a series of Obama-era regulations, Trump has accomplished a great deal.)

Then there is the fact that Trump's broadest and most high profile executive order -- the so-called "travel ban" -- has been in legal limbo almost since its inception. While Trump took a second crack at re-writing it -- dropping Iraq as a country from which all travelers would be banned -- it remains tied up in legal wrangling and there appears to be no near-term timetable under which it will be implemented.

On the legislative front, Trump has been almost entirely stymied. The White House's push to pass legislation to reform and replace the Affordable Care Act never even made it to a House floor vote due to a revolt within the GOP ranks. Promises made by Trump -- and his White House allies -- that a new and improved health care bill is about to be re-introduced hasn't come to fruition yet. And significant doubts seem to remain within the Republican conference that a solution exists on healthcare that could secure a majority of the majority in the House.

The crisis of a government shutdown -- which would happen if Congress can't pass a bill to fund the government by midnight Friday -- appears to be less than likely. But that's only because Trump backed off his demand that $1.4 billion in funding for the border wall be included in any spending bill. Funding for the wall, which Trump insists will be built, will have to wait.

Trump has been most active in foreign policy over his first 97 days. But again, action doesn't necessarily equal accomplishment.

Trump reversed his view of Syria following President Bashar al-Assad's chemical attack on his own people -- targeting nearly five dozen Tomahawk missiles at the airbase believed to be the launching point for the attacks. But there has been very little follow-up to those missile strikes -- either militarily or from a policy perspective.

In regard to North Korea, Trump has been aggressive in his rhetoric. But,the mistake over the location of the U.S.S. Carl Vinson, which the President seemed to imply was steaming toward the Korean peninsula in response to North Korea's aggression but wound up 3,500 miles away on a training mission, seemed to undercut the attempt at forceful message-sending. Trump has asserted that China will be far more willing to help contain North Korea than they have been in the past but that seems based largely on his surprisingly friendly relationship developed with Chinese President Xi Jinping during a two-day visit to Mar-a-Lago.

Viewed broadly and without spin, Trump's first 97 days have largely been defined by often-frenetic movement with relatively few actual results or deliverables to show for it. Movement is a hallmark of Trump's presidential personality. To date, results aren't.

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Donald Trump has spent 97 days in constant motion. But what has he actually done? - CNN

Donald Trump is confounding his critics – CNN

Mr. Trump, it was believed, had little time for international alliances, his "America First" mantra indicating scant concern for the views and concerns of US partners. Indeed, it is hard to think of a US president who had worse global media coverage in his opening few weeks than Donald Trump -- with the possible exception of Ronald Reagan.

One hundred days into the Trump presidency, however, the businessman-turned-politician has succeeded in confounding his sharpest critics on several fronts. President Trump is never going to win a global popularity contest, but he is increasingly gaining the respect of America's allies.

A sharp judge of character and an astute hirer of talent over the course of many decades, Trump has clearly benefited from the presence of a highly respected defense secretary, retired Marine Gen. James Mattis, an outstanding vice president in Mike Pence, a deeply experienced negotiator in Rex Tillerson as secretary of state, and an imposing new national security adviser, Army Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster.

Combined with Mike Pompeo at the CIA and the new rising star at Turtle Bay, US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, a very powerful team is representing the US on the world stage, significantly stronger in many respects to the one assembled by Trump's predecessor, Barack Obama.

What is abundantly clear from Trump's leadership team is that the era of "leading from behind" is emphatically over. Ironically, it was the avowedly internationalist President Obama who began the process of US disengagement worldwide, from the initial withdrawal of US forces from Iraq to the closing of American bases in Europe -- an approach the supposedly isolationist President Trump is busily reversing.

In his first 100 days, President Trump has worked to reinvigorate the partnerships with Britain, Israel, Japan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and a host of other countries that were frankly taken for granted during the Obama years. There is a sense in both London and Jerusalem of a new era in relations with the US post-Obama.

What is emerging from the First 100 days of the Trump presidency is a remarkably traditional approach to US foreign policy, based on strengthening long-standing alliances, while bolstering American military presence in Asia, Europe and the Middle East.

This, coupled with a willingness to actually enforce "red lines" and put America's enemies on notice -- from Damascus and Tehran to Pyongyang and Moscow -- the Trump administration is looking a good deal more robust than its predecessor. And that is no mean feat for a President whom many critics had casually written off as a showman who supposedly lacked the gravitas or discipline to lead the world's greatest superpower.

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Donald Trump is confounding his critics - CNN

Donald Trump Is a Terrible Negotiator – Slate Magazine

US President Donald Trump speaks during a Holocaust Remembrance Ceremony in the Rotunda of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Monday.

Photo illustration by Slate. Photo by Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images.

Donald Trump campaigned as a dealmaker. The entire premise of his candidacy was that hed glower across a conference room table and, using his business guy skillz, defeat the enemies of American greatness to win the sweet end of the lollipop for his voters. He seemed to define good governance as little more than shrewd haggling. If Ronald Reagan was the Great Communicator, Trump would be the Great Negotiator.

So what kind of negotiator has he been since taking office? Is Trump, as he himself would put it, making good deals, or is he, as they say in modern business vernacular, getting his face ripped off?

Its unfair to grade Trump solely on results at this point, as its early and many outcomes remain in doubt. But we can examine Trumps negotiation ploysthe tactics he wields and the manner in which he wields themto assess how likely they are to succeed over the course of his administration. Again and again with regard to looming negotiations that could define his presidency, Trump has gotten off on the exact wrong foot:

Hes sent confusing signals. He said hed be OK with a one-state solution in Israel, before his U.N. ambassador clarified that only a two-state solution would do.

Hes made bold opening moves but then quickly backed down while receiving no concessions in return. He cozied up to Taiwan in an unprecedented manner, then acknowledged One China policy the instant China insisted on it.

Hes made false accusations that poison relationships. European countries do not in fact owe money to NATO.

Hes been ignorant, boorish, and short-fused. Upon hearing, apparently for the first time, about a refugee deal the U.S. cut with Australia, Trump became furious and hung up on the Australian prime minister.

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Trumps First 100 Days, in His Own Words

But our richest case study so far is Trumps push to pass the initial version of the American Health Care Act. We know Trump was 100 percent behind the AHCA, that he left everything on the field, and that he was the closer, attempting to herd various parties into agreement. We also know that he failedto the tremendous embarrassment of both the White House and the GOP. What can we learn about Trumps negotiation style from the bills spectacular fizzle?

The first step in a winning negotiation, as any MBA course will teach you, is to understand the playing field. You need to burrow into the weeds on picayune issues so you know where opportunities for compromise lie. You need to zoom out and see the larger picture so you can suggest clever trade-offs. You must deeply grok the interests of all the players, and the stakeholders they answer to, so you can predict where theyll bend and where theyll stiffen.

As best we can tell from outside the process, Trump made zero effort to learn anything at all. He never studied the wonky details of the bill, according to reports. He was clueless about the broader history of the debate (Nobody knew health care could be so complicated, he marveled at one point). He never bothered to comprehend other intereststhe ideological objections of the hard-line Freedom Caucus, the practical concerns of the moderate Tuesday Group, the alarm of an American public that gave the bill a 17 percent approval ratingso he could empathize and try to assuage them.

Having been too lazy, or too lacking in attention span, to do basic prep work, Trump then seemed to grow bored of the negotiation itself. Effective dealmakers are known for their patience and stamina, which lets them endure the emotional ups and downs of the process, ignore outbursts, and settle in for the long slog of achieving a lasting accord. Trump, however, grew restless within days after wading into the fray, issued an ultimatum, and imposed a tight deadline with no clear rationale. (Consider that negotiations over Obamacare dragged on for more than a year, while the AHCA give-and-take lasted 17 days.) The vote Trump tried to force never happened, and instead he simply scuttled the process before it had begun.

Trump seems completely unaware of the best practices in the field he claims as his forte.

Its true that a ticking clock can sometimes be a powerful negotiation tool. A person who needs a deal done by midnight is likely to offer deep concessions at 11:58 p.m. In an episode we did about time pressure in Slates Negotiation Academy podcast series, my co-host spoke to diplomat Richard Haass about the tactic.* Haass agreed that being up against a clock can force compromise and focus the mind. But artificial deadlines, like Trumps, can backfire. Haass recalled Northern Ireland talks in which he set a firm date with the intent to jam the parties into an agreement, only to find this impeded a deal. In order to make the compromises we wanted, Haass noted, they had to bring along their own internal politics. And they simply needed more time. We tried to move things faster than the domestic politics of one of the parties would allow us. Which is precisely the problem Trump ran up against with Paul Ryan, who needed far more time to achieve compromise between his warring congressional factions.

Trump has suggested this was all mere prelude and that a new health care bill is still in the offingmaybe even in the next few days. But he made every effort to throw a wrench into potential future negotiations, too. In the wake of his defeat he blithely insulted groups he might need to work with next time by tweeting, for instance, that the Freedom Caucus is not on the team and that We must fight them, & Dems, in 2018! He then suggested he might unilaterally end government payments that subsidize low-income peoples health insurance unless Democrats start calling me and negotiatingan empty attempt at extortion that soon withered, demonstrating poor understanding of both negotiation and of the political landscape. More recently, he set another arbitrary deadline, asking all parties to scurry around in hopes of getting something done to improve the cosmetics of the administrations 100-day record. If a health care bill does happen, it will happen in spite of Trump, not because of him.

Given all this behavior, how seriously will anyone take Trumps threats and deadlines next time? Why would you believe that Trump will earnestly consider your interests? Why would you accede to Trumps demands when its clear you can wait him out and bait him into acting rashly? Instead of coolly staring down his foes across the conference table, Trump flipped the conference table onto his own foot, knocked a scalding-hot coffee carafe into his lap, and pelted himself in the face with a wide variety of danish.

People who practice negotiation at the highest levels treat it as a cooperative art. They dont even refer to people across the table as opponents; they call them negotiation partners or, at worst, counterparties. Good dealmakers favor an extended, friendly schmoozing period before making declarations or getting down to brass tacks. They feel out the unstated interests that underlie the stated positions. They dont treat deals as win-lose, distributive battles that divvy up value; they treat them as win-win, integrative collaborations that create more value for everyone. They agree on objective measures so both sides can assess the effects of a deal. They give careful thought to the implementation that will follow a negotiation, because a party that feels bullied or lied to is unlikely to respect the bargain that is struck.

Trump seems completely unaware of the best practices in the field he claims as his forte. When he talks about trade deals, he talks about beating other countries, not working together so both sides profit. He often declares his positions (Mexico is going to pay for the wall) early on, very publicly, before talks have begunwhich both inflames the situation and leaves him no room to make concessions without losing face. He casts doubt on official statistics, which turns negotiation into a hopeless contest of dueling realities. He disparages people and countries hell surely need to work with down the line.

Trump prefers the hardball, win-lose, used-carsalesman approach than the sophisticated dealmaking required to pull off a complex, international agreement.

Instead of doing the hard work of real negotiation, Trump is obsessed with shallow persuasion tactics. He often employs a facile technique known as social proof, which boils down to insisting that everyone else is doing it so you should, too. (Many people are saying is his favorite verbal construction.) He tries to skate by on charm instead of logic. (GOP reps said that in his calls to them during the AHCA fight, he didnt bother to talk policy at allhe just shot the breeze.) He squints, acts tough, talks loud, and insists that people come to me instead of meeting them on metaphoric neutral ground. (By contrast, in our Negotiation Academy interview with super-negotiator H. Rodgin Cohen, he said being gentle and softspoken was an advantage because very few people will give into a bully and, whats more, on the rare occasions you do need to yell, its not lost in a cacophony of noise.) Its like everything Trump thinks about negotiation came from watching bad Hollywood movies.

Trumps defenders argue that he cleverly stakes out extreme positions because theyre only a first offer. Making an outlandish opening bidsuch as Mexico is going to pay for the wallis known as anchoring in negotiation-speak. Its a powerful tactic when your counterparty isnt clear on the value of the thing youre bargaining over, so you can psychologically sway them into accepting the way youve framed things. But its more consistent with a hardball, win-lose, used-carsalesman approach than with the sophisticated dealmaking required to pull off a complex, international agreement involving hot-button issues like border security and immigration. Anchoring is also counterproductive when you back down from your own opening bid while getting nothing in return. See, for instance, Trumps demand to get border wall funding in return for averting a government shutdown. He quickly retracted it while recieving no concessions from the other side. Thats known as negotiating against yourself.

Trumps simplistic ideas about how negotiation works are best exemplified by his impetuous withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership. This was a complex trade agreement toiled on for eight years by skilled trade negotiators from 12 nations. Trump unilaterally pulled out of TPP while receiving no concessions (from, say, China, which benefits tremendously from our withdrawal) in return. Why did he abandon the agreement? He claimed it was because he favors bilateral instead of multilateral negotiation. I presume this is because dealing with only one counterparty at a time is easier for him to wrap his head around. But multilateral negotiations create space for more nuanced trade-offs, allowing everyone to get what they want. (Think about multiteam sports trades where three teams can solve their problems at once.) With TPP, for example, developing countries in Asia gave us concessions on labor and the environment in return for our opening of Japans market to them. Its easier and more effective to negotiate with big groups, says Caroline Freund, a trade expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. With TPP, we were getting a huge chunk of the world to agree to U.S. trade rules. Doing things bilaterally is much less efficient. You need to spend time negotiating each one, taking each one through Congress. Its more difficult, time-consuming, and costly.

All these missteps can be traced back to Trumps fatal flaw as a negotiator: his narcissism. Negotiators get themselves in trouble when theyre blind to the perspective of other parties, says Don Moore, a professor of management at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley, who has been writing about Trumps negotiation style since the start of his campaign. I see the Trump administration making huge errors in their engagement with our partners because they have no appreciation of the other sides interests. They speak in ways that imply great ignorance about our partners on the global stage, and theyre deeply arrogant about the rectitude of their own positions. That alienates partners.

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"Donald Trump is a terrible negotiator" It is known. More...

There have been some isolated bright spots in Trumps presidential negotiation approach. He seems to have in mind some kind of deal with China that would involve both trade issues and North Korea policy, which suggests a willingness to look for creative swaps. But perhaps the only element we could call an asset to Trumps negotiation style, in terms of achieving deals, is his complete lack of core principles. It allows him to stay open to any agreement that will let him sign papers, take credit, and hold a photo op. When you dont know where youre headed, notes Moore, any road will take you there. Im still wary about where that approach takes the rest of us.

*Correction, April 26, 2017: This piece originally misspelled Richard Haass last name. (Return.)

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Donald Trump Is a Terrible Negotiator - Slate Magazine