The Character of Donald Trump
I am a big fan of Stanley Renshon and his books on presidential
character, especially on Bill
Clinton and George
W. Bush. Consequently, I decided to look for anything that he may have
written about Donald J. Trump. I found an article
on BuzzFeed by its editor-in-chief, Ben Smith. Here are some excerpts:
Fortunately, Renshon, a practicing psychoanalyst who also has
a Ph.D. in political science and teaches at the City University of New York
Graduate Center, has thought a lot about Trump. His desktop “Trump” folder has
accumulated more than a thousand files. He has read all the interviews. And he
thinks he’s isolated Trump’s key characteristics in a couple of telling turns
of phrase.
One is Trump’s tic of
telling you how much others like him. (emphasis added)
“I think he actually, believe it or not, he has a need to be
liked,” says Renshon.
“He’ll use the phrase ‘he likes me’ or ‘they like me.’ When
somebody uses that phrase often, you have to give credit to the idea that
that’s something important to them, their need to be liked.”
The word “nice” and the phrase “treats me nicely” appear
often in the Trump corpus, Renshon notes.
“He wants to be treated nicely, softly, with kid gloves — he
wants to be recognized for all the positives he brings to the table, but he’s
not so interested in the negatives,” says Renshon.
“He wants to be liked, and it comes with a threat.”
This is the prelude to his other key characteristic:
. . . The other
“pillar” of Trump’s makeup is a need for validation. (emphasis added)
“He wants to be known as the person he is, not the person you
think he is. He’s not a dumb person; he’s not a clown. My guess is he truly
resents those kinds of characterizations; and he wants to be known for his
accomplishments in the business world, but also for his political success,”
says Renshon.
“My take on him is that he has been pretty surprised,
personally, by his political success… I think he’s surprised where he is and
he’s found a newfound source of self-respect for being where he is.”
That is to say: The last few months have changed Trump, and
he now needs validation not just as a brash brand, but as a political figure.
That is to say: Watch out.
Renshon considers the common diagnosis of Trump as a narcissist
a “hollow and reductionist” label:
“He appears to be a real American nationalist with an
observable, if bombastic, love of his country,” Renshon says. “Obviously a love
of country is inconsistent with real narcissism, where there is no room for
love of anybody or anything but yourself.”
Renshon had one other glimpse of psychoanalytic insight into
Trump, a side note in a much-mocked story about the hardship of having had to
repay a million-dollar loan from his father.
“You don’t want to go to Manhattan. That’s not our
territory,” Trump recalled his father, a developer in less glamorous parts of
New York, telling him.
“He was warning his son against going into the big city to
try to make a name for himself in the Big Apple — and Donald didn’t do that,”
says Renshon. “He’s got a lot of adventure in him and a lot of ambition in him,
and he would like to be recognized for what he has accomplished.”
He doesn’t, Renshon added, have the burning personal ambition
he saw driving Bill Clinton, or the sense of mission that motivates Obama.
“He doesn’t have a clue of what he would do were he to get
in,” speculates Renshon, who characterizes himself as middle-of-the-road
politically, though he shares with Trump a skepticism about immigration.
Finally, he says he thinks Trump is for real: “I think he
genuinely feels like the country is going to hell, and I think he genuinely
feels he can do something about it.”
And there ends Trump’s session on the couch. There is more,
no doubt, to excavate from the strange and combative life of a rich real estate
developer’s son with a chip on his shoulder, but Renshon won’t be doing the
digging.
“I haven’t gone into his childhood very much,” he says. “I
won’t spend much time with it because I don’t think he’s going to become
president.”
Obviously, Renshon needs to get to work on his next book.
Unfortunately, we didn’t have access to a complete analysis of Trump’s
character before the election, or better yet, before the Republican primary
elections and caucuses. But ironically, he wasn’t supposed to be president.
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