Undersell and overperform.
Those of us who had the honour and privilege of working for Jean Chrétien knew that aphorism well. It was his mantra, and therefore ours, too.
It worked. Chrétien was never once defeated in his 40 years in the political game. He won three back-to-back majorities, and he was the most popular prime minister in the history of polling. He repatriated the Constitution, he defeated the separatists, he kept us out of Iraq. He did OK, you might say. A proof is a proof.
And the reason why he was so successful, politically? Along with being a regular guy, along with being likeable, along with having an innate understanding of what Canadians wanted? Because he undersold and overperformed.
He didn't brag a lot. He didn't take credit for the achievements of others. He didn't make everything about him. He kept quiet when he should, and he stayed out of the papers.
U.S. President Donald Trump, now under criminal investigation for obstruction of justice, could have benefited from following Chrétien's example. He could have survived if he'd kept his mouth shut, just once. But he didn't. He couldn't.
Trump's presidency is now measured in months, not years. Because, as the Washington Post has reported, special counsel Robert Mueller is conducting a criminal investigation into Trump's conduct on two fronts. One, whether he obstructed justice when he fired former FBI director James Comey; and, two, when he earlier told Comey to "let go" of a criminal probe into the connections between Russia and his campaign team.
When did the Washington Post discover that Trump was under criminal investigation by Mueller's FBI team? Well, just a day or two after Trump surrogates darkly warned that the Unpresident was seriously contemplating firing Mueller, that's when.
Cause and effect. Action, reaction. Trump just couldn't keep his mouth shut -- he just couldn't keep his stubby little thumbs away from Twitter -- and he made things markedly worse for himself by threatening Mueller. Now he couldn't fire Mueller if he tried: it would be a stronger admission of guilt than a signed confession and videotape of the crimes being committed.
Same thing happened with Comey. Trump just could not keep keep quiet. He. Could. Not. Shut. Up.
So, not long he after he fired Comey -- because Comey, he knew, was getting perilously close to finding out the truth about the alleged Trump-Putin pact to subvert U.S. democracy -- Trump tweeted that Comey better hope "there are no tapes" of their conversations at the White House.
With that, Agent Orange bought himself a world of hurt, on two fronts. One, it prompted Comey to release a highly detailed account of a previously secret meeting with Trump -- a meeting in which the FBI director was directed to drop the Russia inquiries; and, two, it spurred Congress to demand the tapes.
But that is not all. Trump's mouth and tweets have gotten him in plenty of other messes. To cite just one example: executive privilege. Comey was a federal employee when he met with Trump. Their discussions entirely dealt with sensitive matters, most relating to national security.
All of Donald Trump's political wounds are the worst kind: they are self-inflicted.
Trump, therefore, could have easily invoked executive privilege -- a presidential prerogative that would have effectively silenced Comey, and prevented Congress from questioning him on Trump-Comey interactions.
So what did Trump do? He tweeted about his meetings with Comey. A lot. He himself disclosed what was not supposed to be disclosed -- thereby giving Comey the pretext for doing so, too. And he eliminated any credible argument for the invocation of executive privilege. How, everyone wondered, could executive privilege happen when the most senior member of the executive has personally violated it?
I believe the James Comey leaks will be far more prevalent than anyone ever thought possible. Totally illegal? Very 'cowardly!'
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 11, 2017
It goes on and on. His Muslim ban, defeated in serial lawsuits in the Ninth Circuit courts because of Trump's own words. Lawsuits by three states, in which they claim that Trump has violated the Constitution by benefiting financially from his position -- all because he loudly refused to withdraw from his Trump business empire. And, of course, the millions of women (and men, like this one) who marched against Trump the day after his inauguration -- because we objected to the foul, feral things that he says and tweets.
All of Donald Trump's political wounds are the worst kind: they are self-inflicted. Those are always the ones that cut deepest, and are the ones that are usually fatal. He is unlikely to see the inside of a jail cell -- his sycophantic vice-president will pardon him for his crimes, naturally -- but he is certain to be drummed out of office. How can it be otherwise? How can it be avoided, now?
It could have been different. It could have been avoided. If Donald Trump had kept his mouth shut -- if he had stayed away from Twitter -- he could have dramatically improved the odds.
Most of all, if he had simply undersold and overperformed -- as Chrétien did -- it would have all been so, so different.
He didn't. He couldn't. He wouldn't.
He's done.
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