As President Trump flew to Palm Beach Thursday for Easter weekend, there was a lull in his first 100 days — a chance for Washington to reflect on how his presidency is likely to evolve.
There are many question marks, but one sure thing: More than any ideology, Trump values winning itself — whether the contest is over ratings, poll numbers, crowd size, or the claim that he gets things done. This president is no ideologue; he's transactional.
Last week, Americans saw Trump's transactional strategies in action.
Feed your political base what it wants most
The week began as Trump's nominee Neil Gorsuch was sworn in as a Supreme Court associate justice. At 49, Gorsuch has decades to carve his mark on the country's top bench.
NBC's 2016 election exit poll found that 27 percent of Trump voters saw Supreme Court appointments as their most important issue, while 48 percent rated it as important. This moment alone is what prompted many Americans to vote for Trump.
Declare victory often
As a candidate, Trump proclaimed "NATO is obsolete." Wednesday in the East Room, he stood next to NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg and announced NATO is "no longer obsolete." Had NATO changed so much since Trump won the White House? Not really. What changed is that Trump wanted to display allies who support his missile strike against Syria.
GOP strategist and frequent Trump critic John Weaver cited Trump's NATO declaration as an example of Trump's declaring "victory when nothing has changed," just as Trump did a victory lap because "we closed an airport in Syria for two hours." To Weaver this tactic "might satisfy the 30 percent of the hardcore supporters in the country that he has, but it doesn't change reality."