Scrappy as
ever, Donald Trump dismisses polls showing low approval ratings as "fake
news." But whatever his opinion, active opposition to his go-it-alone
presidency appears to be widening.
From
corporate boardrooms to the halls of Congress, Trump is facing an unprecedented
effort to disrupt even the most basic of his presidential functions. It's an
evolving, largely grass-roots effort that aims to follow Trump and his
potential supporters everywhere they go - and there are early signs that it's
having an impact.
The Trump
name alone is enough to spark outrage. There are plans for a mass
"mooning" of Trump Tower in Chicago. Boycotts are underway of
companies that sell Ivanka Trump's clothing line or advertise on NBC's
"Celebrity Apprentice," where Trump has remained an executive
producer.
Congressional
offices are being flooded with emails, social media messages and calls jamming
phone lines. Hundreds of protesters are flocking to town halls and local
congressional offices, some in strongly Republican districts, to voice their
opposition to Trump's Cabinet picks, health care plans and refugee
restrictions.
The goal,
say organizers of some of the efforts, is nothing short of complete resistance.
It's a strategy Democrats say they learned from the success of the tea party
movement, which stymied President Barack Obama's agenda through protests,
door-to-door political action campaigns and online activism.
"The
lesson from the last eight years is, sadly, that implacable resistance
works," said Rep. Gerry Connolly, D-Va. "Because it's all about your
base, and I will simply point out that our base is bigger than theirs, and it's
riled up."
Trump and
some Republicans shrug it off as sore losers unwilling to accept the results of
the election. The president's core supporters, in states like Iowa and
Wisconsin, applaud him as a man of action, delivering on his campaign promises
to move quickly and shake up Washington.
Although
recent polls show his approval ratings in the 40s, a historic low for a new
president, Trump rejects the surveys as false.
"Any
negative polls are fake news, just like the CNN, ABC, NBC polls in the
election. Sorry, people want border security and extreme vetting," he
tweeted on Monday. "I call my own shots, largely based on an accumulation
of data, and everyone knows it."
Later
Monday, Trump renewed his Twitter attacks on The New York Times, slamming the
paper "for the poor reporting it did on my election win. Now they are worse!"
Trump's base
is likely to reward him for his actions, say former White House aides, who note
that all presidents face opposition and public demonstrations.
It's only a
problem if it lets them stop him from "doing what he seeks to do,"
said former George W. Bush spokesman Ari Fleischer, who recalled a travel stop
in Portland, Oregon, when protesters threw rocks at the president's motorcade.
"When it comes to policy full speed ahead, the people screaming at you
can't be convinced to be for you in any case."
But recent
presidents never faced the kind of multi-front opposition that Trump is now
experiencing so early in their terms.
Last week,
he canceled a trip to the Harley-Davidson factory in Milwaukee, where local
groups planned to protest his event. The White House said the protests weren't
the cause. And on Saturday, more than 1,000 protesters beat drums, sang and
chanted outside the gates of Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, where the
president was attending a Red Cross benefit.
The displays
of public outrage have been aimed not only at Trump but at lawmakers, world
leaders and corporate executives who might be tempted to work with him to pass
key parts of his agenda, like replacing the health care law or rewriting trade
agreements.
The White
House claims to be unimpressed by the protests. In fact, a lot of the
demonstrators are simply paid to show up and shout, says Trump Press Secretary
Sean Spicer. But that's just a fantasy, foes say.
"The
level of mobilization against Trump is almost like nothing I've ever seen
before," said Joe Dinkin, spokesman for the Working Families Party, which
coordinates weekly anti-Trump events across the country. "Collaboration
with Trump is a path that will bring well-deserved ire."
Already,
there are some signs that the early efforts may be having an impact on his
ability to promote his agenda across the globe. On Monday, the speaker of
Britain's House of Commons said he strongly opposes Trump addressing
Parliament, making it unlikely he'll be given the honor during a state visit
later this year.
Technology
executive Elon Musk spent hours on Twitter over the weekend defending his
decision to serve on Trump's business council. So far, one CEO- Uber's Travis
Kalanick - has quit the group after facing a weeklong rider boycott.
The ACLU saw
donations pour in after it sued the government over the refugee ban.
And
Republican lawmakers are bracing themselves for an onslaught of rowdy town hall
meetings, after congressmen in California and Florida faced raucous crowds last
weekend.
"The
situation was rapidly escalating into a riot," said California Rep. Tom
McClintock, who had to be extracted by police from an event in downtown
Roseville, the population center of his sprawling congressional district.
"One thing came through loud and clear: They were not angry at President
Trump for breaking any of his promises - they were angry at him for keeping
them."
(AP)
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