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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, April 29, 2020
260,000 Words, Full of Self-Praise, From Trump on the Virus

Three journalists from The New York Times reviewed more than 260,000 words spoken by President Trump during the pandemic. Here’s what we learned.
At
his White House news briefing on the coronavirus on March 19, President
Trump offered high praise for the commissioner of the Food and Drug
Administration, Stephen Hahn. “He’s worked, like, probably as hard or
harder than anybody,” Mr. Trump said. Then he corrected himself: “Other
than maybe Mike Pence — or me.”
On March 27, Mr. Trump boasted about marshaling federal resources to fight the virus, ignoring his early failures and
smearing previous administrations. “Nobody has done anything like we’ve
been able to do,” he claimed. “And everything I took over was a mess.
It was a broken country in so many ways. In so many ways.”
And on April 13, Mr. Trump insisted that governors were so satisfied
with his performance they hadn’t asked for anything on a recent
conference call. “There wasn’t even a statement of like, ‘We think you
should do this or that,’” he said. “I heard it was, like, just a perfect
phone call.”
The self-regard, the credit-taking, the audacious rewriting of recent
history to cast himself as the hero of the pandemic rather than the
president who was slow to respond: Such have been the defining features
of Mr. Trump’s use of the bully pulpit during the coronavirus outbreak.
The New York Times analyzed every word Mr. Trump spoke at his White House briefings and
other presidential remarks on the virus — more than 260,000 words —
from March 9, when the outbreak began leading to widespread disruptions
in daily life, through mid-April. The transcripts show striking patterns
and repetitions in the messages he has conveyed, revealing a display of
presidential hubris and self-pity unlike anything historians say they
have seen before.
By far the most recurring utterances from Mr. Trump in the briefings are self-congratulations, roughly 600 of them, which are often predicated on exaggerations and falsehoods. He does credit others (more than 360 times) for their work, but he also blames others (more than 110 times) for inadequacies in the state and federal response.
Mr. Trump’s attempts to display empathy or appeal to national unity (about 160 instances) amount to only a quarter of the number of times he complimented himself or a top member of his team.
Here is what a week of the analysis looks like:
Excerpts From a Week of Briefings

“But the authority of the President of the United States, having to do with the subject we’re talking about, is total.”
Exaggerations and falsehoods
“This is a horrible thing that happened to our country. This is a
horrible thing that happened to 184 countries all over the world. This
is a horrible thing, and there was no reason for it. It should never,
ever happen again.”
“But, you know, sort of — I’ve been brutalized for the last four years. I
used to do well before I decided to run for politics. But I guess I’m
doing okay because, to the best of my knowledge, I’m the president of
the United States, despite the things that are said.”
Displays empathy or appeals to unity
“I watched the governor of Arkansas, Asa. You saw that. He — I thought
he was terrific. I watched the governor of Oklahoma over the weekend
being interviewed. He was terrific.”
Self-congratulations
Credits others
“You know, they’re supposed to buy their own stockpile. They have state
stockpiles. They’re supposed to be using that. And unfortunately, most
of the states weren’t there. And a lot of people didn’t want to talk
about it, but they weren’t there.”
Blaming others
The Times analyzed 42 press briefing transcripts
and other remarks by Mr. Trump on the virus from March 9 to April 17,
using transcripts from whitehouse.gov. Links are provided to the
transcripts in the sections of quotes below. The visualization above
shows only portions of briefings when Mr. Trump is speaking.
Mr. Trump has mentioned his immediate predecessor, President Barack
Obama, roughly 10 times, sometimes in response to a question. And he has
referred to previous administrations about 30 times, often accusing
them of leaving him with faulty conditions. Mr. Trump has mentioned
governors, individually or as a group, about 400 times, alternating
between compliments and criticism.
While other presidents treated moments of crisis as an opportunity to
bring the nation together, Mr. Trump, bereft of his signature campaign
rallies, has used the evening television appearances as a branding
exercise to promote himself. The briefings became so problematic —
especially after Mr. Trump’s dangerous suggestion last week that injecting disinfectant could help people who are sick with the virus — that the White House is now considering limiting them.
He has regularly used hyperbole to try to cast his leadership as
historic in scope, even placing himself in the pantheon of presidents
like Lincoln and Roosevelt who led the nation through some of its
darkest moments. “We have done a job, the likes of which nobody has ever
done,” he declared at his April 13 briefing.
Less frequently, he has mentioned the hard work and dedication of
ordinary Americans like nurses and truck drivers. He can sometimes be
generous when he credits the work of state and city leaders, including
Democrats, though he often does so while mentioning that they have been
appreciative of him. (Gov. Gavin Newsom of California was “gracious”;
Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York City, “very nice.”) He has repeatedly
singled out “great companies” and the “greatest business executives in
the world,” but individual workers less so.
And he has mentioned the coronavirus’s staggering toll — nearly 50,000 Americans dead as of April 26, and hundreds of thousands of others sick — only fleetingly.
There has always been someone or something else to deflect blame for the
various breakdowns in the government’s response. But Mr. Trump’s
targets have shifted over the last several weeks, showing a clear but
disorderly progression of his message as he struggled to focus attention
elsewhere.
Blames others
“When I took this over, it was an empty box. We didn’t have testing. We didn’t have anything. We had a broken system there. We had a broken system with stockpiling. We had a lot of broken systems. And I’m not just blaming President Obama. You go long before that.” »March 27
“Nobody has done anything like we’ve been able to do. And everything I took over was a mess. It was a broken country in so many ways. In so many ways other than this. We had a bad testing system. We had a bad stockpile system. We had nothing in the stockpile system.” »March 27
“I’ll let you know someday — let’s see what happens — but I may let you know who’s not doing their job. I can tell you the ones that are good, both Republican and Democrat, and the ones who don’t know what they’re doing. But we help some of the ones that don’t know what they’re doing.” »April 13
First it was the virus itself, which Mr. Trump described on March 16 as an “invisible enemy” that “came out from nowhere.”
Two days later, he said at the start of the briefing that the country
was at “war against the Chinese virus.” But after about a week, Mr.
Trump dropped that phrase and refocused his blame on other targets,
while soft-pedaling his criticism of China. The world might have been
better prepared, he said on April 17, “if a certain country did what
they should have done.”
He has also attacked the World Health Organization — a “very
China-centric” entity, he said, that “minimized the threat very
strongly.”
The April 13 briefing shows the full range of Mr. Trump’s statements:
Remarks by President Trump, Vice President Pence, and Members of the Coronavirus Task Force in Press Briefing
Viewed simply as a pattern of Mr. Trump’s speech, the
self-aggrandizement is singular for an American leader. But his approach
is even more extraordinary because he is taking credit and demanding
affirmation while he asks people to look beyond themselves and bear
considerable hardship to help slow the spread of the virus.
“He doesn’t speak the language of transcendence, what we have in
common,” said Jennifer Mercieca, a historian of American political
rhetoric at Texas A&M University. Instead, Dr. Mercieca said, he
falls back on a vocabulary he developed over decades promoting himself
and his business.
“Trump’s primary goal is to spread good news and information and market
the Trump brand: ‘Trump is great. The Trump brand is great. The Trump
presidency is great,’” she said. “It’s not the right time or place to do
that.”
At 260,000 words and counting, enough to fill a 700-page book, Mr. Trump
has been writing his own history of the virus, one that is favorable to
him, settles scores and is often at odds with the facts.
There were at least 130 examples of falsehoods or exaggerations. He ignored his long public record of
making breezy claims about the virus when he said on March 17, “I’ve
felt it was a pandemic long before it was called a pandemic.” He falsely
described the Obama administration’s response to the H1N1 virus, saying
on April 6, “It was like they didn’t even know it was here.”
Speaks falsely or exaggerates
“When the professionals need a test, when they need tests for people, they can get the test. It’s gone really well.” »March 10
“We have a problem that a month ago nobody ever thought about.” »March 16
“This is — when somebody is the president of the United States, the authority is total, and that’s the way it’s got to be.” »April 13
There is no precedent for the platform that Mr. Trump commandeered for
himself through much of March and April: a nationally televised
appearance that can go on for up to two and a half hours, seven days a
week, often without interruption. Critics of the president have
questioned why the cable networks continue to air the briefings, saying that decision is, in effect, handing over to the president control of the day’s agenda.
“It was thought that presidents were extraordinarily powerful at the
height of the Cold War when they could ask the three networks for 20
minutes of TV time,” said Michael Beschloss, a presidential historian.
“But as far as a president’s being able to exert influence, I think this
is much greater than that.”
If Mr. Trump is always the hero in his version of events, the way he describes his role has changed over time.
He called himself a “wartime president” at first but mostly dropped the label by late March.
More recently he has often described himself as a commander leading an
enormous undertaking to reconfigure the nation’s supply chain to deliver
badly needed medical supplies like testing kits.
“There’s never been anything like it,” he said on April 1, despite widespread concerns that not enough testing was being done.
He credited himself with leading a turnaround — echoing his campaign
promise to “Make America Great Again” — even though there are still serious shortages and deficiencies in the nation’s testing system.
“We had a broken system,” he said April 14. “And now we have a great system.”
The coronavirus briefings have often contained the same phrases and themes that he used in his 2016 race.
“It’s consistent with the way he campaigned when he said, ‘I alone can
fix it,’” said John Murphy, a professor at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign who studies the rhetoric of American presidents and
politicians.
Dr. Murphy said that most presidents avoid taking personal credit
because they appreciate the fact that Americans can draw the connection
themselves between presidential leadership and the country’s successes.
With Mr. Trump, there is no such subtlety. “The level of
self-congratulations that occurs every day at these press conferences is
unprecedented,” Dr. Murphy added.
The president, often criticized as lacking empathy, does occasionally
express it. The Times found about 60 instances in the analysis. His
usage of unifying language was fleeting at first, rarely more than a
terse sentence about the “tremendous spirit” of Americans.
Uses unifying language or attempts empathy
“For those of you who are feeling alone and isolated, I want you to know that we are all joined together as one people, eternally linked by our shared national spirit — we love our country — a spirit of courage and love and patriotism.” »March 22
“I want to start by saying that our hearts go out to the people of New York as they bear the brunt of the coronavirus pandemic in America.” »April 3
“You have people that have never asked for business interruption insurance, and they’ve been paying a lot of money for a lot of years for the privilege of having it. And then when they finally need it, the insurance company says, “We’re not going to give it.” We can’t let that happen.” »April 10
His praise of health care workers who put themselves at risk every day —
“these are our warriors” — and his admiration for the resilience of the
American people have become somewhat more common, especially in his
prepared remarks at the opening of each briefing.
“We’ve marshaled every instrument of American power, and we’ve unleashed
our most potent weapon of all: the courage of the American people,” he
said on April 16.
At some briefings, Mr. Trump has tried to rally the country, saying the
United States will emerge stronger. He often expresses confidence that
the ravaged country will bounce back quickly — “like a burst of light.”
And at perhaps his most effective briefing, he soberly braced the
country for two weeks ahead that would be “painful,” as doctors
predicted a large number of deaths.
Once in a while, the deadliness of the virus seems to weigh on Mr.
Trump. He spoke of a friend on March 31 who came down with an especially
bad case and was in a coma. “Sort of a tough guy, a little older, a
little heavier than he’d like to be,” the president said. “It’s not the
flu. It’s vicious.” And he has spoken of seeing the images of Elmhurst
Hospital Center, miles from where he grew up in Queens, overwhelmed by coronavirus patients.
But his laments about the virus’s economic toll — the damage it has
caused “probably the best economy in the history of the world” — are far
more common than remarks about the human toll.
“It’s the things that are not there, the things he isn’t doing,” said
Roderick P. Hart, a professor at the University of Texas at Austin who
is an expert in political speech. “It’s what’s not there — that sense
of, ‘I’m part of the human condition,’ the ability to empathize with the
downtrodden and the afflicted — that’s what’s so important.”
