Wednesday, May 10, 2023

100 Reasons Trump Is Unfit to Be President

 

100 Reasons Trump Is Unfit to Be President

(Hannah Yoest / Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

100 Reasons Trump Is Unfit to Be President

A timeline of Trump outrages.
 
JUNE 26, 2020


Part of the mad genius of Donald J. Trump is that he never runs from scandals. He just creates more of them. So many more that anyone attempting to track them all risks becoming numb as a survival mechanism.

A collective amnesia sets in. We ask ourselves, “Do you remember that time when Trump got impeached, said that super-racist thing, cozied up to dictators, threatened our elections, or oh, whatever that was?”

Well, we at The Bulwark do. Yes, it can be hard to keep up. We all need reminders. So, lest anyone forget or require convincing, here’s a non-exhaustive list of 100 reasons Donald Trump is unfit to be president.

  • 1

1985-1994

  • Reported $1.17 billion in business losses over the decade. Trump “appears to have lost more money than nearly any other individual American taxpayer,” according to the New York Times.

  • 2

May 1, 1989

1990s

1991-2009

  • Declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy for his various businesses six times.

  • 5

2005

  • Bragged about grabbing women “by the pussy” in a conversation with Access Hollywood’s Billy Bush picked up on a hot mic.

  • 6

2011-2016

  • Promoted birtherism against President Barack Obama—the false claim that Obama was not born in the United States, that his birth certificate was fraudulent, and that therefore he was constitutionally ineligible for the presidency.

  • 7

2015-2016

2015-present

June 16, 2015

July 18, 2015

  • Said Vietnam POW John McCain is “not a war hero” and “I like people who weren’t captured.”

  • 11

November 22, 2015

  • Claimed that “thousands and thousands” of people in New Jersey’s Arab communities cheered on 9/11.

  • 12

2016 campaign season

May 11, 2016

May-June 2016

July 27, 2016

  • Called on Russia to hack and release Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s emails.

  • 16

July 30, 2016

  • Denigrated the family of U.S. Army Capt. Humayun Khan, who was killed in 2004 while serving in Iraq, after Khan’s father delivered remarks at the Democratic National Convention.

  • 17

July 30, 2016

  • Broke with U.S. policy of supporting Ukraine over Russia’s invasion of Crimea, saying: “The people of Crimea, from what I’ve heard, would rather be with Russia than where they were.”

  • 18

Fall 2016

January 20, 2017

  • Trump inaugurated, becomes the 45th president of the United States.

  • 19

January 21, 2017

January 21, 2017

January 27, 2017

  • Enacted the “Muslim ban” that, through executive order, prevented foreign nationals from seven predominantly Muslim countries from entering the United States for 90 days; the order was quickly contested in the courts, and its enforcement was blocked.

  • 22

April 29, 2017

  • Told Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, who had sanctioned the extrajudicial killing of drug suspects, that he was doing an “unbelievable job” of cracking down on his country’s drug problem.

  • 23

May 9, 2017

May 11, 2017

May 16, 2017

  • Remained silent when security forces working for Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan, attacked protesters outside the Turkish ambassador’s residence in Washington, D.C.

  • 26

July 9, 2017

  • Considered creating a joint cyber security task force with Russia, despite the fact that Russia has been responsible for a host of cyber attacks against the United States. He tweeted, “[Russian President Vladimir] Putin & I discussed forming an impenetrable Cyber Security unit so that election hacking, & many other negative things, will be guarded.” Putin confirmed in a 2018 event that he had discussed the idea with Trump.

  • 27

August 15, 2017

August 25, 2017

October 11, 2017

  • Tweeted a suggestion that “fake news” networks, such as NBC, should have their broadcast licenses “challenge[d].”

  • 30

October 24, 2017

  • Asked then-CIA Director Mike Pompeo to meet with a conspiracy theorist who believes that Russia didn’t hack emails from the Democratic National Committee computers during the 2016 campaign, but that the DNC itself leaked them.

  • 31

November 26, 2017

January 2, 2018

  • Escalated nuclear tensions with North Korea by tweeting, “I too have a Nuclear Button, but it is a much bigger & more powerful one than his, and my Button works!”

  • 33

January 11, 2018

February 5, 2018

February 21, 2018

  • Required a handwritten reminder to appear empathetic when he met with students and parents affected by school shootings.

  • 36

March 3, 2018

  • Congratulated Chinese President Xi Jinping on eliminating term limits. “I think it’s great,” Trump said. “Maybe we’ll have to give that a shot someday.”

  • 37

April 5, 2018

  • Denied any knowledge of the $130,000 hush-money payment his lawyer Michael Cohen made to adult-film actress Stormy Daniels to keep her silent during the 2016 election. A book by Daniels laying out the details of her alleged 2006 affair with the married Trump was published later in 2018.

  • 38

April 6, 2018

May 2018

May 2018

  • Accepted a memo from President ErdoÄŸan of Turkey that claimed innocence for a Turkish firm under investigation by the Southern District of New York. According to John Bolton’s 2020 memoir of his time as Trump’s national security advisor, Trump “told Erdogan he would take care of things, explaining that the Southern District prosecutors were not his people, but were Obama people, a problem that would be fixed when they were replaced by his people.” (On June 20, 2020, he did fire the U.S. Attorney for the SDNY, Geoffrey Berman, who not only had indicted the Turkish-owned firm but had reportedly opened an inquiry into Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani.)

  • 41

June 2018-present

July 12, 2018

  • Threatened that the United States might “go our own way”—interpreted as a signal that he wanted to pull out of NATO—throwing a summit with world leaders into turmoil. He had repeatedly called NATO “obsolete” during the 2016 campaign, then “not so obsolete” once he was in office.

  • 43

July 13, 2018

July 16, 2018

  • Sided with Russian president Vladimir Putin in rejecting the findings of the U.S. intelligence community about Russia’s interference in the 2016 election during a joint news conference with Putin in Helsinki, Finland.

  • 45

July 22, 2018

August 15, 2018

  • Revoked former CIA director John Brennan’s security clearance in retaliation for his criticism of the president.

  • 47

September 13, 2018

September 25, 2018

September 29, 2018

  • Talked affectionately of his relationship with North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un: “We fell in love, okay?

  • 50

October 29, 2018

  • Just days after Trump fanatic Cesar Sayoc was arrested for sending pipe bombs to CNN offices and to prominent Trump critics, Trump tweeted, “The Fake News Media the true Enemy of the People.”

  • 51

November 7, 2018

December 6, 2018

December 12, 2018

December 19, 2018

December 22, 2018-January 25, 2019

February 15, 2019

February 25, 2019

  • Falsely credited his daughter Ivanka with creating “millions of jobs.” (In 2016, he had said that his children would have no role in the White House; instead, Ivanka and her husband Jared Kushner were given large advisory portfolios.)

  • 58

March 13, 2019

March 24, 2019

  • Attorney General William Barr released a misleading four-page summary of the long-anticipated Mueller Report. Three days later, Mueller wrote that Barr’s summary “did not fully capture the context, nature, and substance of this Office’s work and conclusions.”

  • 60

April 24, 2019

May 20, 2019

  • Blocked former White House counsel and Mueller Report key witness Don McGahn from testifying before Congress—one of numerous witnesses the White House refused to let testify.

  • 62

May 24, 2019

  • Circumvented Congress by declaring an “emergency” over Iran so he could sell arms to Saudia Arabia, Jordan, and the United Arab Emirates.

  • 63

June 19, 2019

June 28-29, 2019

June 28-29, 2019

  • Asked Chinese President Xi Jinping to help him get re-elected, according to then-National Security Advisor John Bolton’s later account: During the G-20 meeting, Trump “stunningly . . . turned the conversation to the coming U.S. presidential election, alluding to China’s economic capability to affect the ongoing campaigns, pleading with Xi to ensure he’d win. . . . He stressed the importance of farmers, and increased Chinese purchases of soybeans and wheat in the electoral outcome.” Bolton also reports that Trump told Xi he supports his building of concentration camps that hold an estimated one million Uighurs.

  • 66

July 14, 2019

July 23, 2019

July 25, 2019

  • Asked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to investigate Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden—the action that led to President Trump’s impeachment by the House of Representatives in December 2019 and trial in the Senate in January and February 2020.

  • 69

August 20, 2019

August-September 2019

September 2019

  • Canceled GOP presidential caucuses and primaries in four states.

  • 72

September 4, 2019

  • Displayed an official National Weather Service map in the Oval Office that was falsified with a Sharpie to make it seem as if government forecasters had during the previous week projected that Hurricane Dorian might strike Alabama, as he had erroneously claimed.

  • 73

October 1, 2019

  • Reports surfaced that Trump had suggested soldiers shoot migrants illegally crossing into the United States. He reportedly also inquired about putting a “water-filled trench, stocked with snakes or alligators” at the border, “prompting aides to seek a cost estimate.”

  • 74

October 23, 2019

  • Described NeverTrump Republicans as “human scum.”

  • 75

October 27, 2019

November 2019

November 7, 2019

  • Ordered to pay $2 million in damages to settle claims brought by the New York state government that the Trump Foundation had misused funds. (The foundation was already being dissolved because of what New York officials called a “shocking pattern of illegality . . . including unlawful coordination with the Trump presidential campaign, repeated and willful self-dealing, and much more.” Much of this story was first unearthed by Washington Post reporter David Fahrenthold.)

  • 78

November 19, 2019

  • Smeared Alexander Vindman, a U.S. Army lieutenant colonel detailed to the National Security Council, after Vindman testified in the House impeachment investigation.

  • 79

February 7, 2020

  • Fired impeachment witnesses Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman and U.S. Ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland. (Also fired Alex Vindman’s brother, Lt. Col. Yevgeny Vindman, also a National Security Council staffer.)

  • 80

February 20, 2020

  • Longtime Trump adviser Roger Stone was sentenced to more than three years in prison after his conviction on seven felony charges, including lying under oath to Congress and obstructing the investigation into the 2016 election.

  • 81

February 26, 2020

February 28, 2020

March-May 2020

  • Repeatedly touted the antimalarial drugs hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine as treatments for COVID-19, despite the lack of high-quality evidence regarding either their effectiveness or their potential harmful side effects. On April 20, the administration demoted a top government virologist who questioned the scientific merits of these drugs for treating COVID-19. On May 18, Trump claimed that he had been taking hydroxychloroquine pills himself, although a note released that evening by the White House physician did not confirm the claim. By June, with the president’s attention elsewhere, both the NIH and the FDA cautioned against the use of hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine for treating COVID-19.

  • 84

March 11, 2020

April 3, 2020

April 4, 2020

  • Blasted Navy Capt. Brett Crozier for writing a letter informing Navy leaders about the outbreak of coronavirus among sailors aboard the carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt.

  • 87

April 7, 2020

April 23, 2020

  • Suggested that light or disinfectants could be applied to the human body to treat coronavirus: “Supposing we hit the body with a tremendous—whether it’s ultraviolet or just very powerful light. . . . supposing you brought the light inside the body, which you can do either through the skin or in some other way, and I think you said you’re going to test that too. It sounds interesting. . . . And then I see the disinfectant, where it knocks it out in a minute. One minute. And is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning. Because you see it gets in the lungs and it does a tremendous number on the lungs.”

  • 89

May 12, 2020

May 2020

  • Pushed a new conspiracy theory, “OBAMAGATE,” that alleges that his predecessor used the final days of his presidency to lead a coup against the incoming Trump presidency—a scandal that would, in Trump’s words, be “the biggest political crime in American history, by far!” Trump later said, without evidence, that Obama had committed “treason.”

  • 91

May 15, 2020

May 20, 2020

May 26, 2020

May 29, 2020

May 29, 2020

  • Called Minneapolis protesters “THUGS” and said “when the looting starts, the shooting starts.” Twitter flagged the tweet as violating the platform’s rules against glorifying violence.

  • 96

June 1, 2020

  • Ordered the dispersal of peaceful protesters—by law-enforcement officers who attacked them with flash grenades, smoke grenades, rubber-ball grenades, pepper spray (a kind of tear gas), and pepper balls—so that he could walk from the White House across Lafayette Square for a photo op in front of St. John’s Church. In the days that followed, representatives from the White House, the Trump campaign, and various law-enforcement agencies denied that tear gas was used during the incident, although they later walked back their denials. The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff later apologized for his presence at the scene. The incident also led former secretary of defense James Mattis to condemn the president: “We know that we are better than the abuse of executive authority that we witnessed in Lafayette Square.”

  • 97

June 9, 2020

  • Speculated that a 75-year-old Black Lives Matter protester who was hospitalized after being shoved on June 4 by Buffalo police is an “ANTIFA provocateur.”

  • 98

June 20, 2020

  • Held an indoor campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma—without requiring the masks and social distancing recommended by government health authorities. Told the crowd that he believed too many cases of coronavirus were being logged and that he had instructed “my people” to “slow the testing down.” (After initial speculation that this was a joke, he later said that it was not, and that he really had ordered a slowdown in testing.) Two Secret Service agents present at the Tulsa rally later tested positive for COVID-19, a fact that then resulted in dozens of Secret Service personnel having to quarantine themselves. Eight staffers from Trump’s campaign staff also tested positive, so all campaign staffers who attended the rally reportedly had to quarantine themselves.

  • 99

June 21, 2020

June 26, 2020

  • As of this date:

    The national debt stands at more than $26 trillion, having increased by at least $5.2 trillion since President Trump assumed office.

    The most recent estimate for the monthly unemployment rate was 13.3 percent.

    More than 124,000 Americans have died from COVID-19.

Image of Amanda Carpenter

Amanda Carpenter

Bulwark political columnist Amanda Carpenter is an author, a former communications director to Sen. Ted Cruz, and a former speechwriter to Sen. Jim DeMint.


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