WASHINGTON — About 90 days ago, when Donald Trump accepted the Republican presidential nomination, he had a moment of equanimity. As convention delegates chanted “Lock her up!” Trump shook his head no. ADVERTISING WASHINGTON — About 90 days ago, when
WASHINGTON — About 90 days ago, when Donald Trump accepted the Republican presidential nomination, he had a moment of equanimity. As convention delegates chanted “Lock her up!” Trump shook his head no.
“Let’s defeat her in November,” he counter-proposed.
It was a very different Trump who appeared at Sunday night’s second presidential debate: on his heels, facing a revolt in his party because of a video unearthed by The Washington Post in which Trump boasted about sexually assaulting women. And Trump declared that, if elected, he would subvert the justice system to go after his political opponent.
“I didn’t think I’d say this, but I’m going to say it, and I hate to say it,” Trump began — always a sign that he was about to say something ill-advised. “But if I win, I am going to instruct my attorney general to get a special prosecutor to look into your situation because there has never been so many lies, so much deception.”
Special prosecutors, of course, are designed to remove political influence from the justice system; Trump was proposing a special prosecutor for the express purpose of punishing a political opponent.
“It’s just awfully good that someone with the temperament of Donald Trump is not in charge of the law in our country,” Hillary Clinton replied.
“Because you’d be in jail!” Trump interrupted.
Sunday night called for contrition from Trump, as his campaign implodes because of his taped performance as sexual predator. But Trump, though turning in a more even debating performance than he did in his debut, does not do contrition.
Before the debate, he lined up women who claimed they were victims of Bill Clinton’s sexual misdeeds and posted a video of their meeting, with poor audio, on Facebook. Sixteen minutes into the debate, Trump invoked Bill Clinton’s infidelities. After 22 minutes, he started interrupting his opponent.
Before long he was pacing, scowling, pursing his lips, shaking his head and hectoring her: “Oh, you didn’t delete them? … Oh, 33,000? Yeah. … Oh yeah, what about the other 15,000?”
“Please allow her to respond,” interjected moderator Anderson Cooper. “She didn’t talk while you talked.”
“Yes,” Clinton agreed, “that’s true, I didn’t.”
“Because you have nothing to say,” Trump snapped.
Trump then started arguing with the moderators. “I’d like to know, Anderson, why aren’t you bringing up the emails? I’d like to know.” In fact, the previous question was about Clinton’s emails.
Trump had his moments Sunday night and hit Clinton in all her areas of vulnerability. But throughout the debate, he was a man at odds with everybody — even his running mate, Mike Pence. When moderator Martha Raddatz reminded Trump that Pence said Russian provocations in Syria should be met with American strength and the United States should be prepared to strike the Assad regime, Trump replied: “OK. He and I haven’t spoken, and I disagree.” On the most important foreign policy issue of the moment.
Trump repeated his grudging apology for the new video of his predatory sexual language, but he repeatedly chalked it up to towel-snapping. “It’s locker room talk, and it’s one of those things. I will knock the hell out of ISIS,” he declared.
As in the previous debate, Trump took some of his trademark detours around the truth, declaring anew that he opposed the war in Iraq and that such a claim “has not been debunked” (he gave his approval to the war on Sept. 11, 2002, on Howard Stern’s radio show). He twice declared that “I don’t know Putin”; he previously said “I got to know him [Putin] very well.” When Cooper asked about his middle-of-the-night tweet telling people to check out a sex tape, Trump replied, “no, there wasn’t ‘check out a sex tape.’” His exact words in the tweet were “check out sex tape.”
But mostly, Trump was angry, with everybody and everything.
“Why don’t you interrupt her? You interrupt me all the time,” he complained to Raddatz, though Trump had plenty of air time.
And again: “Excuse me. She just went about 25 seconds over her time.”
And again: “You know what’s funny? She went over a minute over, and you don’t stop her. When I go one second over, it’s like a big deal.”
Will arguing with the refs win Trump more votes? Probably not any more votes than he wins by dismissing his aggressive sex talk as locker room banter. But Cooper and Raddatz have reason for concern: If Trump wins, maybe he’ll send a special prosecutor after them, too.
Dana Milbank is a columnist for The Washington Post whose work appears regularly in the Tribune-Herad. Email him at danamilbank@washpost.com.