San Francisco Chronicle

Trump’s vicious gift: tweets

- E.J. DIONNE JR. © 2016 Washington Post Writers Group Email: ejdionne@washpost.com Twitter: @EJDionne.

Donald J. Trump has now driven home, in a way no apologist, enabler or timid analyst can plausibly deny, that he is far too nasty, immature and undiscipli­ned to be president.

And thanks to Hillary Clinton for the assist: By using the first debate to bring up the case of a Miss Universe who, Trump decided, had put on too much weight, the Democratic nominee unleashed the ugly inner Donald — the man whom the candidate and his handlers have been trying to hide.

This should be a wake-up call to political analysts who have gone out of their way since Trump first announced his candidacy to pretend that he was the ingenious creator of a political special sauce who deserved our respect for “speaking his mind.” No, Trump all along has been a clinically self-involved con man who never took the issues, the presidency or the future of our country seriously.

Trump’s gift to voters was a series of tweets he started sending out at 3:20 a.m. Friday. His behavior gives new meaning to the old ads about 3 a.m. phone calls questionin­g how a wouldbe president might respond to crisis. Beware any human being who feels an impulse to send out angry tweets at that hour.

The first, interestin­gly, was an expression of pure paranoia about his own campaign. “Anytime you see a story about me or my campaign saying ‘sources said,’ DO NOT believe it. There are no sources, they are just made up lies!”

This presumably was a response to stories such as a New York Times account by Patrick Healy, Ashley Parker and Maggie Haberman based on conversati­ons with Trump lieutenant­s. The Times had reported that Trump “found it hard to focus” during his shambolic debate preparatio­ns and that he “did not seem to pay attention during the practice sessions.” Not exactly the traits you want in a chief executive with power over our military, the FBI and the nuclear button.

A couple of hours later, between 5:14 and 5:30 a.m., he turned to tweets about Alicia Machado, the Miss Universe winner who, as Clinton pointed out, faced criticisms from Trump over her physique after she won her crown in 1996.

The most remarkable was: “Did Crooked Hillary help disgusting (check out sex tape and past) Alicia M become a U.S. citizen so she could use her in the debate?”

Parsing that one would require a phalanx of psychologi­sts. Can you imagine any other candidate for our highest office even talking about a “sex tape”? And on the facts, Trump has little backup, apparently only what the Washington Post called “racy but not explicit footage from a Spanish-language reality television show.”

And notice the paranoiala­ced innuendo. What does he think he can gain by saying that Clinton gave “help” to Machado in gaining citizenshi­p? Is he trying to prompt stories about a new underhande­d Clinton trick to help one of his tormentors gain the right to cast a ballot?

If this Trump episode does not lead to a flood of defections among Republican politician­s supporting him, they will be on record as putting party loyalty (or fear of Trump’s followers in GOP primaries) over the need to protect the nation from a truly unhinged leader. And this should be the end of the pretense, which sometimes drives the media, that whatever might be wrong with Trump, there are things equally wrong with Clinton. Sorry. Clinton may have her problems, but she has never, ever behaved like this.

That a political party, a political system and a media blessed with broad constituti­onal freedoms have allowed a man like this to get so close to the presidency should be a matter for serious introspect­ion. And that introspect­ion should start now.

If an onslaught against a Gold Star family didn’t stop him, why should his weehours-of-the-morning storm of invective be any different?

The answer is that this episode should finally force everyone to say: enough. Trump is neither normal nor stable. He has shown us who he is. We should believe what we see.

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