2016-12-16



(Pix WalletHub 15 Dec. 2016)

John Kiernan over at WalletHub Blog has put together a very interesting conversation among a number of people.  We were all asked to answer the question: Will Donal Trump be a good president?

Every president takes his (or her) own unique path to the White House, but the ascent of President-Elect Donald J. Trump has truly been unlike anything we’ve seen before. Trump has gone from rich kid to real-estate mogul, from bankrupt to “The Celebrity Apprentice,” and from leader of the birther movement to leader of the free world. And with no previous political experience, it’s fair to wonder whether the Oval Office will suit him.

So will President-Elect Donald Trump grab the bull by the “wherever” and fulfill his promise to “make America great again”? Or will we find ourselves worse off and wishing we could say, “You’re fired”? It can be difficult to put politics aside when contemplating such questions, especially so soon after such a contentious election, but our expert panel is up to the task.

In search of more insight into what we can expect from at least the next four years, we asked experts in the fields of economics, finance, public policy and more to answer one simple question: Will Donald Trump be a good president? All in all, twelve experts say no, sixteen vote yes and five are on the fence. You can check out their responses below. And if you’d like to weigh in with a theory of your own, please share your thoughts in the Comments section at the bottom of the page.

The responses were quite enlightening (All Experts). They do a good job of reflecting the current thinking among a group of people whose opinions may be useful for others contemplating this question.

This post includes the full text of my own response and links to the text of all responses.   Happy to have interested people weigh in as well.

Yes, Donald Trump Will Be A Good President

Larry Catá Backer
W. Richard and Mary Eshelman Faculty Scholar and Professor of Law & International Affairs at Pennsylvania State University



The election cycle that ended on the first Tuesday of November 2016 has proven to be among the most polarizing in more than a generation. And for those who thought themselves in control of the institutions that helped shape and managed the decision presented to voters on that first Tuesday, the election cycle proved more disastrous still. And even more humiliating was the inability of our intellectual, economic, social and political classes to avoid even the appearance of international interference—in the manner of developing states subject to the machinations of powerful outsiders—which they themselves long used as evidence of the robustness of the American political system.

And indeed, the nasty bickering and hand wringing that followed the voting—and the hysterical calls to dismantle the structures of this ancient Republic to suit the short-term ambitions of the factions that now appear to gasp power—all suggest the start of what passes for rectification campaigns in the U.S. From the day after that first Tuesday in November, the authority of both political parties shattered. The intelligentsia stood marked as substantially out of touch (both of the left and the right and within ivory tower, think tanks and among the chattering classes who inhabit news and social media), and the fault lines of social, ethnic, religious, economic, and sub-national divisions became much clearer.

It is only within that quite specific context, and at this stage in the development of our federal Republic, that we can intelligently and rigorously approach the question—“will Donald Trump be a Good president?” My answer is yes. To understand this answer it is necessary first to understand what I mean by “good president”, and then to see how Mr. Trump has the potential to fall within the parameters of that definition.

A good president is a person who is incapable of developing a viable personality cult around himself. The most dangerous presidents in this Republic are those whose personality far exceeded the constraints of their office. An individual who serves the office better serves the Republic than one for whom the office serves him (eventually her). A good president starkly serves as a mirror of ourselves—with all of our faults—and as a base for self-improvement. A good president is one that forces the nation to confront its own weaknesses and failures, and to rigorously confront the realities and limits of our ideologies, aspirations, methods and consequences.

A good president serves as a constant reminder that the nation is not dependent on the office of the president the way subject peoples are taught to believe in their dependence on their leaders. A good president reminds us constantly by the parade of his faults, ambitions, vanity, and service of personal agendas, both the value of fractured power within the federal government and the value of power sharing among the federal and state governments. In all these senses, Mr. Trump will be a good president.

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Yes, Donald Trump Will Be A Good President

Lowman S. Henry Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Lincoln Institute of Public Opinion Research, Inc. & Host of The Weekly American Radio Journal

William Binning Professor Emeritus in the Department of Political Science at Youngstown State University and Former Ohio GOP local official

Patrick K. Basham Director of The Democracy Institute and Author of “Scared of US! How an M&M foreign policy can rescue America from Obama & Hillary’s Kumbaya World”

June Teufel Dreyer Professor of Political Science at the University of Miami and Former Commissioner of the Congressionally Mandated U.S-China Economic and Security Commission

Larry Catá Backer W. Richard and Mary Eshelman Faculty Scholar and Professor of Law & International Affairs at Pennsylvania State University

Ken Reid Elected on the Loudoun County Board of Supervisors in Leesburg District

Michelle Easton President of Clare Boothe Luce Policy Institute

Tom Kilgannon President of Freedom Alliance

Lynn Fitch Treasurer of the State of Mississippi and Chair of the State Financial Officers Foundation (SFOF)

Daniel Lapin President of American Alliance of Jews and Christians & Author of “Thou Shall Prosper: 10 Commandments for Making Money & Business Secrets from the Bible”

Krishna Jayakar Associate Professor & Co-Director of the Institute for Information Policy and Co-Editor of the Journal of Information Policy in the College of Communications at Penn State University

Karen Kerrigan President & CEO of the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council

Raymond J. Keating Chief Economist of the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council

John. C. Chalberg Senior Fellow at Center of the American Experiment

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No, Donald Trump Will be a Bad President

Dennis Jett Former Ambassador and Professor of International Affairs at the School of International Affairs at Pennsylvania State University

Eugene Halton Professor in the Department of Sociology at University of Notre Dame

Richard Lachmann Professor of Sociology at the University at Albany - State University of New York

William R. Keylor Professor of History and International Relations in the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies and Director of the International History Institute at Boston University

Laurence J. Kotlikoff William Fairfield Warren Distinguished Professor and Professor of Economics at Boston University

Mariya Y. Omelicheva Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at University of Kansas

Judd Thornton Assistant Professor of Political Science at Georgia State University

Ori Swed Lecturer in the Sociology Department at University of Texas at Austin

John Allen Williams Professor of Political Science at Loyola University Chicago

Joseph M. Knippenberg Professor of Politics at Oglethorpe University

Alistair Edgar Executive Director of the Academic Council on the UN System and Associate Professor of Political Science at the Balsillie School of International Affairs at Wilfrid Laurier University

Sunita Parikh Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at Washington University in St. Louis

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On the Fence

Brandon Arnold Executive Vice President of National Taxpayers Union

Richard A. Epstein Laurence A. Tisch Professor of Law at New York University Law School and James Parker Hall Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of Law and Senior Lecturer at the University of Chicago Law School

Stephen M. Krason Professor of Political Science & Legal Studies and Director of the Veritas Center for Ethics in Public Life at Franciscan University of Steubenville, Co-founder and President of the Society of Catholic Social Scientists and Author of “The Transformation of the American Democratic Republic”

Aaron Major Associate Professor of Sociology at the University at Albany

Boyd D. Collier Professor Emeritus in the College of Business Administration at Tarleton State University

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