Trump Doesn’t Understand Game Theory

The president’s handling of disaster relief shows he doesn’t care what he delivers as long as his base sees that he is fighting for them.

You’ll often hear people say that someone is playing chess (or even multi-dimensional chess) while their opponents are playing checkers, which is meant to convey that one strategy is more complex and forward-thinking than the other. This is not really a very useful analogy. A better one would be to compare chess to poker. One main difference between chess and poker is the distinction in how much the players know about their opponents. When you play chess, you can see all the pieces at all times and you know the rules on how they are permitted to move, so you have perfect information. In poker, you do not know what cards your opponent is holding in his hand, and you also don’t know which cards will emerge from the deck, so you have imperfect information.

If I were to argue that the Democrats are playing chess on the disaster relief bill while the Republicans are playing poker, I would not be arguing that the Democrats are pursuing a more complex and far-sighted strategy, although they are doing that, too. I’d be arguing that they have an information advantage.

Because of massive storm damage, the Democrats know that Congress must produce a disaster relief bill very quickly to alleviate the suffering of people in southeastern and midwestern states that are primarily represented by Republican legislators.

Senate Republicans from Georgia, Nebraska and Iowa, all of which are set to receive money, warn delaying the relief package until next month would be a major disappointment.

“Yes, there’s a time crunch. We need to get it done as soon as possible. We need to have a down payment. My staff worked really hard with the Appropriations Committee staff so we could include disasters from 2019 in order to be able to have those funds available,” said Sen. Deb Fischer (R-Neb.).

“We need to get some aid out there. People all across the state have been traumatized. This has been a huge event to hit Nebraska,” she added, warning that “people will be more stressed” if they have to wait until May.

But the Democrats also know that the president is having a feud with Puerto Rico and is opposed to giving the island any further disaster relief.

Trump went to bed Monday tweeting insults about Puerto Rico, and he began Tuesday doing the same…

…Trump’s latest attacks, including false claims that the federal government has provided $91 billion in recovery aid for Puerto Rico, have led to an increasingly public fight between the president and the top officials of a U.S. territory struggling to recover from a hurricane that killed thousands of Americans.

Trump has grown increasingly frustrated with Puerto Rican recovery efforts and the federal disaster aid that he claims is being misused. He has asked top advisers about ways to limit federal support going to the island in the wake of the 2017 hurricane, which knocked out power on the island for months.

A massive emergency aid bill for victims of hurricanes, wildfires, flooding and other natural disasters was defeated in the Senate on Monday amid a fight between Democrats and Trump over the Puerto Rico relief.

In addition to basic disaster relief funding, the Democrats want to allocate money to redesign Puerto Rico’s water distribution system so that it can withstand future hurricanes. President Trump is ardently opposed to this and told a closed-door meeting of Republican senators that he would not support any bill including that aid.

The Democrats understand that the president is locked into a position. They can see his cards and they know his possible moves. They know that they have only one chance to win aid for Puerto Rico and that is to tie the aid to states that are primarily represented by Republican lawmakers.  They know that their Republican colleagues will pay a massive political price if this aid is delayed and an even bigger one if it is not forthcoming at all.  All they need to do is hold firm. If they do not, they lose.  But if they maintain their strategy, they will eventually get what they want, perhaps with the additional bonus of a very large political benefit. It is not hard to game out because they have all the information they need. They don’t know for certain that they will win, but they know that if they lose, their opponents will suffer an even larger loss.

The president should be able to understand the Democrats’ position, but he doesn’t care to examine all the information that is available to him.  This is a self-inflicted way of creating an asymmetric game where his side stands to lose more than the other team. If this were poker, he’d be making a big bluff but doing it without realizing that the cards already on the table have information that could better help him understand his odds of winning.

He’s also playing a team game as a solo player. The congressional Republicans cannot win in this situation because they suffer when the president loses, but the president must lose in order for them to win.  If they play along with the president long enough to cause a delay in aid, they will be damaged. If they then override his objections and pass a veto-proof aid package, they take another hit for defying their own leader. And if they back him and the Democrats do not give in (and they have absolutely no incentive to give in) then the people in their states will turn on them with real fury.  Their best play is to make sure the aid is delivered promptly, which means that they should demonstrate to Trump immediately that they will override him if he persists and then follow through on the threat if they have to.

That’s the best solution available to them. The vast majority of them do not oppose the aid to Puerto Rico if it is part of a package that also provides help to themselves or their colleagues.  So, they will incur no loss if Puerto Rico gets a hurricane-resistant water system and more recovery money.  Their other losses are unavoidable as long as the president persists and the Democrats don’t cave ((and the Democrats have absolutely no incentive to cave).

The president wants people to think that he is master negotiator, but he only does well when the odds are overwhelmingly in his favor. If it would cost an unpaid contractor more money to take Trump to court than he is owed, he has no choice to take whatever partial payment is on offer. But Trump does not do well in negotiations where the playing field is closer to even.  The main reason for this is that he is bad at game theory.

It often infuriated Democrats, but President Obama studiously avoided picking fights he was very unlikely to win.   If winning was going to require the Republicans to negotiate and offer concessions, he was almost never going to come out on top. In his second term, he adjusted his strategies to reflect this constraint rather than railing against a constraint he could not change.

“We’re not just going to be waiting for legislation in order to make sure that we’re providing Americans the kind of help they need. I’ve got a pen and I’ve got a phone,” Obama said Tuesday as he convened his first Cabinet meeting of the year.

Obama continued: ”And I can use that pen to sign executive orders and take executive actions and administrative actions that move the ball forward in helping to make sure our kids are getting the best education possible, making sure that our businesses are getting the kind of support and help they need to grow and advance, to make sure that people are getting the skills that they need to get those jobs that our businesses are creating.”

Unlike Obama, President Trump focuses much less on results than on preserving the impression that he is fighting for the things that please his base. It’s useful to see how this manifests itself, because one persistent criticism of Obama’s negotiating style was that it didn’t have enough passion. Brendan Nyhan dubbed this “the Green Lantern theory of the presidency.”

During the Bush years, [Matt] Yglesias coined the Green Lantern Theory of Geopolitics to mock conservatives who believed that “[t]he only thing limiting us is a lack of willpower” in foreign policy. What he identifies here is nothing less than a Green Lantern theory of the presidency in which all domestic policy compromises are attributed to a lack of presidential will. And, like the Green Lantern theory of geopolitics, this view is nonfalsifiable. Rather than learning from, say, the stimulus vote that Obama faces severe constraints in the Senate, liberal GL proponents have created a narrative in which all failure and compromise is the result of a lack of presidential willpower. ([Jane] Hamsher, for instance, claims that “The failure to establish a public option to control medical costs and increase competition is President Obama’s failure alone.”) It’s a fantasy world.

There’s a legitimate difference between idealism and pragmatism. Some people want to push the country in a different direction and aren’t overly worried about time constraints. If you’re trying to overcome discrimination, for example, short-term losses don’t necessarily concern you. You’re in it for the long haul and the name of the game is moving the Overton Window. But people in power or trying to gain power have to be concerned with short-term results and political considerations. They need to pass appropriations and deliver disaster relief, and failing to do so because of unrealistic demands or poor game theory is not acceptable.

If Obama didn’t bring enough drama to rile up his base and therefore oversaw two disastrous midterm elections for his party, he also didn’t blindly waddle into the threshing blades by repeatedly demanding that the Republicans do things and then watching them win simply because they refused to do them. Obama wanted to get the best results available and he realized that short-term political gain from posturing would eventually be swamped by punishment for lack of delivery.

Trump is nearly the opposite. He will take short-term political hits and he will watch legislative efforts die in predictable balls of flame. He really doesn’t care what happens or what he delivers as long as his base sees that he is fighting for them. Denying aid to Puerto Ricans is what his base wants to see. If Trump eventually has to give aid to Puerto Ricans, he really doesn’t care. His base will remember that he opposed that aid, and that’s all that matters to him.

When he stands for reelection, he’ll get to test whether pleasing his base with rhetoric and posturing is going to make up for failing to deliver on much of what he promised. He’ll also find out whether his base is all he needs to win.

It could be that Trump’s approach is better electoral politics than Obama’s approach, although based on the results of Trump’s first midterm elections it doesn’t seem like he’s found a better answer. It’s definitely not better governance.

Trump would be a better negotiator if he wasn’t so transparent. On the other hand, if he was better at getting what he wants, he’d be an even worse president. Ironically, he’d be even more disastrous if he were a team player and understood game theory. We should be relieved that he lets the Democrats play chess while he is playing poker.

 

Reality Bites

Theresa May has written a long letter to EU Council President, Donald Tusk, requesting a further extension to the A.50 notification period until June 30th., the same date she asked for, but was refused, last time out. It is a well drafted letter, which many of us commenting here could probably have drafted for her.

In it she makes much of her ongoing discussions with Jeremy Corbyn as providing an opportunity to create a consensus for the UK’s future relationship with the EU. The EU has been telling her that for some time.

But she also acknowledges some facts the UK has been seeking to deny for some time: Firstly, that the Withdrawal Agreement is finalised and cannot be renegotiated. Any discussion with Corbyn is about the non-binding Political Declaration on the future relationship between the EU and UK, and that alone.

Secondly, that any continuation of the UK’s membership beyond 22nd. May creates a legal obligation to take part in the European Elections and she promises to make all the required preparations to enable the UK to do so. She still clings to the hope that the UK might agree and ratify “an orderly Brexit” with the EU before that date, thus enabling the UK to leave without holding the elections.

However that rather ignores the fact that the UK’s participation also impacts on the number of seats on offer in other European Member states, and parties and candidates have a legal right to know how many seats will be on offer. Will the Dublin constituency have 3 or 4 seats, for example, and therefore will some parties nominate 1 or more candidates? Expect legal challenges to the legitimacy of the election if that is not clear by the time nominations close.

Mark Durkan, former leader of the Social Democrat and Labour Party (SDLP) in Northern Ireland, has sought and won a nomination to run as a Fine Gael Candidate in Dublin – on the understanding that Brexit meant no European Parliament elections would be taking place in Northern Ireland. Will he now run in the Northern Ireland constituency in an election which may or may not happen? How does that possibility impact on his credibility as a candidate for Dublin?

So the bottom line is that her request can only be acceded to by the EU Council on the clear understanding that the UK will participate fully in those elections. Like it or not, the UK will be having “a public vote” on what will effectively become a second referendum on Brexit, however much some parties and groups may like to claim otherwise.

No doubt extreme Brexiteer Parties like UKIP and fringe right wing groups will do well, but will parties supporting Remain or a second public vote do better than pro-Brexit parties? Will the Tories campaign on the basis of a no-deal Brexit, or on “May’s deal”?

No doubt different wings of the Tory party will try to have it both ways but I would expect the election to become (in part) a referendum on their Party’s performance in office. If so, the results will not be pretty. Expect the Tories to claim furiously that it is “a meaningless vote” and that they are focused on “delivering Brexit”.

But if the poll is high and the Tories poll much worse than Labour, the writing will be on the wall. European Elections in the UK have generally provoked little interest and resulted in low polls. This one could be as important at any in UK history. A last chance for Remainers and Brexiteers to have their say.

Unlike a binary referendum poll, voters will also be able to choose between parties supporting “May’s deal”, No deal, a Labour deal?, or Remain. If Parliament can have lots of indicative votes, why not the people as a whole?

But for Labour the EP elections could also prove to be a crucial turning point. They have to avoid contamination with May’s unpopular deal, especially as the legally binding Withdrawal Agreement isn’t even within the scope of the Corbyn May discussions.

So those discussions will have served their purpose by the mere fact that they have happened at all, providing May with a pretext to look for a further A.50 extension from the EU Council, and Corbyn an opportunity to look constructive and statesmanlike. No one will be surprised if they don’t lead to an agreed Corbyn May Brexit deal, and all gloves will be off for the EP elections to come.

But what does Corbyn’s Labour party campaign for? A Brexit deal containing “A customs union”, “close alignment with the Single Market”, or for Remain?  The minimum requirement for holding both Leave and Remain potential Labour voters together would be a public vote on the outcome of any future negotiations with the EU.

But for the vast majority of UK voters, Brexit itself has become a huge turn off, and most want it finished with, one way or the other, sooner rather than later. A promise to hold further extensive negotiations with the EU will hardly be a winning electoral platform.

So it will become increasingly difficult for Labour to ride both the Leave and Remain horses at once. Corbyn may have to come out and declare that Remain is preferable to “May’s Deal”, and that a future Labour government would explore all options – a better Brexit deal or a programme to reform the EU as a member – and would put the outcome of any discussions to a second public confirmatory vote.

Corbyn needs to be careful that Remainers do not lose patience with him and move en masse to vote for the Lib Dems, especially in a list system election where voting Lib Dem doesn’t hand the seat to a Tory. My guess is the EP elections will prove almost as difficult for Labour as for the Tories with Brexiteers gravitating to extreme right parties, and Remainers gravitating to the Lib Dems.

But for the EU, all of this is potentially a win win, even if Nigel Farage and some extreme UKIPers are re-elected to the Parliament, provided that Remain supporting candidates are in the majority. This really could be the Remainer’s last chance, and they had better show up at the polls this time around. If more than 17.4 Million voters show up and support Remain supporting candidates, the argument could be over.

French diplomats have characterised suggestions by some EU Officials that the UK might only be offered a “long extension”, perhaps 12 months, as “clumsy.” There are still some discussion to be had before this scenario could come about. The EU Council must agree any extension by unanimity or the UK is out without a deal on 12th. April. That should concentrate minds in the meantime.

Reality can have a hard edge.

O’Rourke In the Driver’s Seat – Beto O’Rourke: A Visionary Who Lives His Vision!!!

A headline from Politico:

Beto’s driving himself around Iowa. Again.

What more apt vision of the real job of President of the United States could there be?

Lincoln said it: “Of the people, by the people, for the people.”


Beto O’Rourke: A visionary who truly lives his vision!!!

More Politico…the subheadline:

On most presidential campaigns, allowing a candidate to routinely drive to events would be considered operational malpractice.

—snip—

Not on this one!!!

No “public/private” bullshit here!!!

No “Fool the press and impress the fools!!!” act

Just a someone with a vision and the guts to fulfill it on every level possible.

Thank God!!!

Read on.
(Emphases mine)

CARROLL, Iowa — Beto O’Rourke is back behind the wheel of a rented minivan in Iowa. And political pros — including some of his own advisers — are cringing.

In presidential politics, candidates almost never drive themselves to events, and for good reason: Car rides are an opportunity to nap, make phone calls, return emails or read briefing materials.

O’Rourke, however, operates differently. He became a Democratic sensation after visiting every one of Texas’ 254 counties in his closer-than-expected Texas Senate race last year, often pulling up to events behind the wheel. He stayed in the driver’s seat for his highly publicized, unaccompanied road-trip through the American Southwest in January while mulling a run for president. And there he has remained in the earliest days of his campaign.

“It’s icy and the cops are out — Jesus,” said former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who tried persuading O’Rourke to hire a driver, as most candidates do, when the two met for lunch shortly before O’Rourke announced his presidential campaign.

“If the candidate hits someone and hurts someone — campaign over,” added Ed Rendell, a former governor of Pennsylvania and former Democratic National Committee chairman. “If the candidate drives and wrecks a car, campaign teetering on the brink.”

On most presidential campaigns, allowing a candidate to routinely drive would be considered operational malpractice — one misstep short of a catastrophe or, more likely, a colossal waste of time. Running for president is exhausting, distances between events are long and candidates have more productive things they could be doing instead.

And there is the kicker word:

“Allowing”

In this campaign, O’Rourke is the boss!!!

He’s not particularly “bossy” about it, he’s just gonna do it his way…as he will if elected president…and you can vote for him, against him or just not vote at all. It’s all the same to him. Win or lose, he’s going to follow his own vision. No little cadre of button pushers, poll addicts and other pol sci majors pushing him this way and that with the tides of the day’s newsfeeds; he’s up early and on the road, getting his “newsfeed” at local gas stations, motels and coffee joints.

Getting the feel of things.


“Newsfeel” is what I call it. It’s how I realized that Trump was going to win when he was still in the primaries. On the road, in the boonies. You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind is blowing; all you need to do is to step outside.


This man has a personal vision…a new vision, it appears to me, at least on the political level that he is occupying…about what U.S. citizens do and don’t want from their president.

They want someone like them…someone who takes care of his own business as much as possible (as must they)…rather than a frontman backed up by hundreds of paid servants and not a few big money controllers.

And I personally think that he is going to win.

Watch.

More:

Even some of O’Rourke’s advisers have quietly suggested that he cut down on driving himself, but to no avail.

Following a flight to Des Moines, a drive to Ames, a rally at Iowa State University, a question-and-answer session with reporters, a photo line and another round of media interviews, O’Rourke late Wednesday stepped into a waiting Dodge Grand Caravan and drove off. It was still raining the next morning when O’Rourke tweeted he was “on the road and excited to see you” at events in Carroll, Denison and Sioux City.

The publicity O’Rourke has commanded for driving has proved effective in an O’Rourke-isn’t-too-good-to-drive-himself kind of way. He told Radio Iowa this month — in an interview conducted while O’Rourke was driving — that driving is “just a way for me to fully engage.”

“I don’t like being on my phone, being distracted looking at emails or texts,” O’Rourke told the radio station. “I want to be seeing the beautiful country through which we’re driving, seeing that community as we pull in, really taking in Main Street and I love being behind the wheel. I love driving. I love road trips.”

—snip—

For O’Rourke, it is not a stunt. He does not, by numerous accounts, turn the wheel over to an aide once he is out of public view.

—snip—

Unlike when someone else is driving, he said, “There’s a certain security factor in being in control of your own vehicle.”

“There’s a certain security factor in being in control of your own vehicle.”


Bingo!!!

Dodge Caravan?

The federal government?

As above, so below.

Watch.

Later…

AG

P.S. As his fame and face recognition grows, he will have a harder and harder time being anonymous on the road. It’s good he’s getting this roadfeel now…he’s going to need it later.

If 2020 is Close, Wisconsin Will Be Close

I cannot agree with Washington Post columnist Henry Olsen that the Republicans’ Tuesday victory in a Wisconsin Supreme Court election means that Donald Trump “is becoming a slight favorite for reelection.” As he notes, the narrow margin separating the candidates was almost entirely explained by differential turnout. Republican stronghold counties turned out at 53 percent while Democratic ones turned out at 51 percent, and Milwaukee lagged behind at 38 percent. That appears to have been enough for the GOP, as they currently lead 50.2 percent to 49.8 percent. It’s no secret that conservatives are more motivated than liberals to take control of the nation’s courts, and they tend to skew older, whiter and more affluent, which are all variables associated with higher turnout in low-profile elections.

Nonetheless, the result is disappointing and should serve as a warning sign that the Badger State will be in play in  2020.  Yet, one major difference between 2016 and 2020 is that in 2016 Scott Walker was the governor of Wisconsin and was able to suppress turnout in Milwaukee.

On election night, Anthony was shocked to see Trump carry Wisconsin by nearly 23,000 votes. The state, which ranked second in the nation in voter participation in 2008 and 2012, saw its lowest turnout since 2000. More than half the state’s decline in turnout occurred in Milwaukee, which Clinton carried by a 77-18 margin, but where almost 41,000 fewer people voted in 2016 than in 2012. Turnout fell only slightly in white middle-class areas of the city but plunged in black ones. In Anthony’s old district, where aging houses on quiet tree-lined streets are interspersed with boarded-up buildings and vacant lots, turnout dropped by 23 percent from 2012. This is where Clinton lost the state and, with it, the larger narrative about the election.

Without a Republican governor in 2020, it’s going to be impossible for the state’s Republicans to replicate that degree of voter suppression, so in order to carry the state Trump is going to need to do better than he did in 2016 with the people who actually get to cast a vote. Mr. Olsen is probably correct when he predicts that Trump will do better than his approval numbers. If he doesn’t, he’ll lose as badly as Herbert Hoover, George McGovern, and Walter Mondale did in their futile election bids. Most likely, Trump will easily clear 45 percent and perhaps even win Wisconsin, but nothing in Tuesday’s election results really should give him much more optimism than he had last week.

It does indicate that the GOP has not collapsed in Wisconsin, but I don’t know anybody who thought that it had. If the overall election in 2020 is close then the election in Wisconsin will be close. But we knew that already.

Chuck Grassley Getting Ready to Cut Someone

When I saw that the president of the United States said in a speech that the noise from wind turbines causes cancer, my first thought was that 2018 U.S. Wind Champion Award winner Chuck Grassley of Iowa was going to be perturbed. Not only is Iowa one of the national leaders in the production of wind energy, but Senator Grassley is largely responsible for creating the wind energy tax credit. When the senator’s response came, it did not surprise or disappoint:

“I’m told that the White House respects my views on a lot of issues,” Grassley said. “(Trump’s) comments on wind energy — not only as a president but when he was a candidate — were, first of all, idiotic, and it didn’t show much respect for Chuck Grassley as the grandfather of the wind energy tax credit.”

Grassley wasn’t done, either, because he followed up his “idiotic” quote by issuing a press release “co-signed by Oregon Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley along with several senators running for president as Democrats, including Sens. Kamala Harris of California, Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, and Bernie Sanders of Vermont.” The press release called for more federal funding for wind energy.

Trump once said “wind farms are a disaster for Scotland, like Pan Am 103,” a reference to the Lockerbie bombing he made while opposing an offshore wind farm project near his golf course.  For some reason, wind and death are connected in his mind, perhaps due to what the wind does to his hair.

For whatever reason, he’s been thinking a lot about wind power lately. At a recent rally in Michigan he told his MAGA supporters “If Hillary got in. . . you’d be doing wind. Windmills. Weee…”If it doesn’t blow, you can forget about television for that night. ‘Darling, I want to watch television.’ ‘I’m sorry! The wind isn’t blowing.’ I know a lot about wind.”

Senator Grassley has been grumbling about Trump’s aversion to wind since August 2016, telling reporters then that candidate Trump would keep his anti-wind promises “over my dead body.” In 2017, Grassley went after Rick Perry when the Energy Secretary released a report claiming that the unreliability of wind power created a security threat to the energy grid.  He’s clearly not happy that the leader of his party continues to spread idiotic disinformation about wind power.

As for cancer, that’s something you can get from breathing in burnt coal particulates. So, Trump’s preference for coal over wind isn’t just stupid. It’s deadly.

Midweek Cafe and Lounge, Vol. 110

Welcome back, music lovers. Here’s a little something from 1999:

1999 marked the year that Reich Remixed was released. Steve Reich’s iconic pieces were left in the hands of a number of prominent DJs, who added their own spin to music that was already ahead of its time. That was the year of several other remix albums, as well as some important recordings by a number of electronic artists. I’ll cover a few of those this week.

More to come as time permits. In the meantime, cheers!

Don’t Ask Trump Where Anyone Was Born

Shortly after the 2016 president election, the Guardian reported that Donald Trump’s grandfather had been banished from the Kingdom of Bavaria for failure to fulfill his military service requirement. Another factor was that he had temporarily emigrated to America without notifying the authorities in Bavaria that he was leaving.

A historian has discovered a royal decree issued to Donald Trump’s grandfather ordering him to leave Germany and never come back.

Friedrich Trump, a German, was issued with the document in February 1905, and ordered to leave the kingdom of Bavaria within eight weeks as punishment for having failed to do mandatory military service and failing to give authorities notice of his departure to the US when he first emigrated in 1885.

Roland Paul, a historian from Rhineland-Palatinate who found the document in local archives, told the tabloid Bild: “Friedrich Trump emigrated from Germany to the USA in 1885. However, he failed to de-register from his homeland and had not carried out his military service, which is why the authorities rejected his attempt at repatriation.”

The decree orders the “American citizen and pensioner Friedrich Trump” to leave the area “at the very latest on 1 May … or else expect to be deported”. Bild called the archive find an “unspectacular piece of paper”, that had nevertheless “changed world history”.

At the time this royal decree was issued, the Kingdom of Bavaria was technically a federal state within the German Empire, so it would be accurate to say that Trump’s grandfather was both ethnically German and a German citizen.

His grandson, the current president of the United States of America, also avoided military service.

Back in 1968, at the age of 22, Donald J. Trump seemed the picture of health.

He stood 6 feet 2 inches with an athletic build; had played football, tennis and squash; and was taking up golf. His medical history was unblemished, aside from a routine appendectomy when he was 10.

But after he graduated from college in the spring of 1968, making him eligible to be drafted and sent to Vietnam, he received a diagnosis that would change his path: bone spurs in his heels.

The diagnosis resulted in a coveted 1-Y medical deferment that fall, exempting him from military service as the United States was undertaking huge troop deployments to Southeast Asia, inducting about 300,000 men into the military that year.

The deferment was one of five Mr. Trump received during Vietnam. The others were for education.

It’s not surprising to see that Trump and his grandfather share this history, but it is at least a little curious that Trump is so keen to deport people after the way his grandfather was deported. You’d think the episode would be a key part of the family lore, and not in a way that was sympathetic to the Bavarian government.

[Friedrich] Trump was born in Kallstadt, now in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate, in 1869. He emigrated to the US aged 16 initially to escape poverty, attracted by the gold rush.

…Returning on a visit to Kallstadt in 1901, Trump fell in love with Elisabeth Christ, whom he married a year later, returning with her to the US. But when she became homesick and wanted to return to Germany, the authorities blocked his attempts to settle there.

In an effort to overturn the royal decree dated 27 February 1905, Trump wrote an obsequious letter appealing to Prince Regent Luitpold, addressing him as “the much-loved, noble, wise and righteous sovereign and sublime ruler”.

But the prince rejected the appeal and the Trumps left Germany for New York with their daughter on the Hapag steamship Pennsylvania on 1 July 1905. Elisabeth was three months pregnant with Donald Trump’s father, Fred.

As you can see, our president’s father was conceived in Kallstadt but born in America. But that’s not what Donald Trump said yesterday during a press conference with the NATO secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg. For clarity, Mr. Stoltenberg is Norwegian, so it’s unclear why Trump boasted to him that ““My father is German, was German, born in a very wonderful place in Germany so I have a very great feeling for Germany.” Maybe he was simply trying to soften the blow of his criticism of Angela Merkel.

Either way, his father was not born in “a very wonderful place in Germany.” More remarkably, this isn’t the first or even the second time that Trump has made this claim. During different appearances in Europe during a July 2018 trip, the president said, “my parents were born in the European Union. I love these countries; Germany, Scotland…” and “Don’t forget both of my parents were born in EU sectors – my mother was Scotland, my father was Germany.”

It’s true that his mother was born in Scotland, although not that she was born in the European Union which only came into existence in November 1993. It would be a simple thing to say that his father was conceived in the “EU sector” but born in New York. Maybe he doesn’t make this accurate distinction because it would cause people to ask why they had set sail for America and that would remind everyone that they had been forcibly removed from the Continent. Or, maybe, he’s just a pathological liar who doesn’t really care if his comments will be fact-checked and debunked the second after he leaves the room.

As a historical footnote, Friedrich Trump was a victim of the 1918 flu pandemic that killed somewhere between three and five percent of the global population. I guess his genes weren’t up to the natural selection test. Given his grandfather’s history, you’d think that Trump would have more compassion for the people he deports and more of a concern for public health. But it looks like all he inherited from his grandfather was draft avoidance and a willingness to write obsequious letters to kings and dictators.

One thing we know for certain is that Trump isn’t a reliable source on where people were born.

SHOCK HORROR! May to talk to Corbyn

Almost three years after the Brexit referendum  and two years after she lost her overall parliamentary majority, Theresa May has decided she needs to talk to opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn in order to forge a consensus on the way forward. Even more shockingly, she is going to abide by “the will of Parliament” if it supports an alternative to her My deal, no deal, or no Brexit approach.

No, this is not a belated April Fools Day story. Apparently, this process is going to be complete by next Wednesday, April 10th., in time for the emergency European Council meeting, where she hopes to get agreement to a further short A.50 notification extension to enable a new deal to be negotiated with the EU, agreed by parliament, and implemented in law.

Apparently this process is to be completed by the 22nd. May so that the UK doesn’t have to participate in the European Parliament elections. Good luck with that. For a country which has routinely accused the EU of lacking in democracy, the UK government seems to be absolutely determined to avoid participating in European Parliamentary elections, a second confirmatory public vote, or indeed a general election.
Indeed, if Corbyn were to insist that any deal they might agree must be put to a public confirmatory vote, we could be looking at a 6 months extension being required. Why would he agree any deal with May without one? He needs to inoculate Labour against any complicity in the political chaos and economic downsides the whole Brexit process has precipitated. The only way for him to do so is to pass the ultimate responsibility for any deal onto the people themselves.

So it has to be extremely doubtful that the EU Council will agree to a further A.50 extension which does not involve UK participation in the European Parliament elections. In some ways that vote could also be a useful indicator of how political opinion is shifting among the people of the UK as a whole. No doubt UKIP, Nigel Farage, and perhaps even the BNP will do well. But will Brexiteer parties as a whole outvote parties supporting Remain or a second confirmatory vote?  Perhaps the EU would like to know?

In the meantime, May’s premiership limps on. According to BBC correspondent, Laura Kuenssberg, 14 cabinet minsters opposed seeking a further A.50 extension, with only 10 Ministers in favour. More resignations to follow? More Tory leaders more concerned with burnishing their Tory Leadership credentials than dirtying their bibs compromising with Corbyn?

We could arrive at the extraordinary situation where a May/Corbyn compromise deal receives more support from Labour MPs rather than Tory MPs. Certainly the DUP and ERG appear to have overplayed their hands, and forced May into the arms of the political leader they hate and fear most. Apparently 170 Tory MPs have written to Theresa May seeking her immediate resignation – a majority of the Tory parliamentary party.

But of course they shot their bolt last December when they lost a confidence vote in her leadership with party rules forbidding another leadership heave until next December.  So now the only way of getting rid of her would be to vote no confidence in her government and risk a general election. Probably the only thing they fear more right now. So at the moment the May Corbyn talks seem to be the only game in town.

But the May Corbyn talks might also be taken over by events. Opinion in the country seems to be bifurcating between Remainers and no deal Brexiteers who don’t want any compromise with the EU whatsoever. Those advocating a negotiated soft Brexit could find themselves being overtaken by the extremes on either side. It will become increasingly difficult for Labour to ride both Remain and Leave horses at once. Again, a second confirmatory public vote may be the only way of squaring that circle.

From the EU’s point of view, today’s events mark another win. The DUP is about the only party or grouping still holding out hope for changes in the Withdrawal Agreement. All everyone else is talking about is changes to the (non-legally binding) political declaration which the EU has always been willing to consider.

The EU has also been increasingly focused on preparations for a no-deal Brexit, with particular attention being paid to assuring the integrity of the Customs Union and Single Market while also being true to the letter and spirit of the Good Friday Agreement – which is predicated on having an open border between Ireland and N. Ireland. Varadker is meeting Macron today, and Merkel is due to travel to Dublin on Thursday.

Very little has been revealed of the substance of their discussions and the subject is almost taboo in Ireland, for fear of legitimating Brexiteer claims that Brexit need not result in a hard border. There is no good solution here which may cause the EU Council to be quite patient with the UK in the hope that better options will somehow emerge later.

A UK government minister, commenting on the political chaos in Westminster, opined that at least in the UK their were no riots in the street (unlike France) or government shut downs (as in the USA). How much longer can the current crisis continue without even that boast becoming untrue?

The GOP Will Never Clean Up Trump’s Mess

I hope I live long enough to see the day when we again have a Democratic administration and a Republican Congress. It will be quite the spectacle when the Republicans try to conduct oversight. For example, if they have concerns about how the president’s office is handling security clearances, they can’t expect to be told that their inquiries are jeopardizing the privacy of millions of innocent Americans.

President Trump’s top spokesperson on Tuesday called House Democrats’ efforts to investigate the White House’s security clearance process “dangerous” and “shameful,” saying it could put millions of people’s personal data at risk.

“What the Democrats are doing is playing a very dangerous and a shameful game, frankly,” White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters. “They’re putting the 3 million people that do have a security clearance at risk. If you [pull] one individual, you’re putting all 3 million people’s personal information at risk.”

Sanders did not explain how the Democrats’ investigation would potentially jeopardize the broad swath of government employees and contractors’ data.

If they want cabinet members to testify, they’ll be told that they can’t discuss anything because of executive privilege. If the president obstructs justice, the attorney general will just declare that it’s impossible for a president to obstruct justice. If the president has engaged in rampant criminality ranging from every kind of fraud to self-dealing to sexual assault, they’ll be told to take it to the ballot box.

The Republicans are putting all their eggs in Donald Trump’s basket. But he won’t be in the Oval Office forever. Once he’s gone, they’ll begin to understand how many of those eggs they’ve broken.

And that’s just on the oversight question. God forbid they should criticize a Democrat for impeding free trade or cozying up to dictators or being a bad ally to our friends.

I know the Republicans will try to turn on a dime and pretend none of this ever happened. They did that with George W. Bush. But that was more like breakfast-for-one. With this many broken eggs, the post-Trump revisionism will be like a banquet buffet of hypocrisy.