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Trump’s Crisis Management – Textbook
Townhall.com ^ | March 31, 2020 | Robert Charles

Posted on 03/31/2020 8:52:42 AM PDT by Kaslin

Trump’s mastery of crisis management is textbook. People may object to his optimism, generalities, or editorializing on medical data, but the basics are all there. As the coronavirus crisis persists, Americans should be grateful for a seasoned chief executive. Despite Speaker Pelosi’s unforgivable default to pushing unrelated money into the third crisis bill, partisanship must be secondary – for all of us. Ground truth: Trump’s instincts are proving right.

Several points make the case. They confirm the crisis is being well-handled. First, core principles matter. Veterans of government, business and military crises know them. You need a viable plan, dispassionate review of facts, qualified team, delegation of authority, internal and external communication, anticipatory thinking, and adjustment to changing circumstances.

Winston Churchill, no stranger to controversy or crisis, offered nuggets. Three come to mind. Reflecting on World Wars I and II, Gallipoli to Battle of Britain, he never lost hope, focus or confidence in the future.

He noted success is hard, especially when good news is in short supply. Keep envisioning, working, and believing – as success begins and ends with the conviction that victory is possible, especially by working together.

Asked to define success, he observed: “Success is the ability to go from failure to failure without losing your enthusiasm.” Trite yet true, and he knew, as he had.

In another exchange, he reflected on approaching the storm, being in it, looking back. Key is the conviction to survive. Simply put, “if you are going through hell, keep going.”

Most timely, Churchill guided leaders in crisis to harness the past in service of the present. “The farther back you can look, the farther forward you are likely to see.” President Trump is doing that. He is lashing experience together, seeking to draw the best from all.

In short, the President is implementing those core principles. In response, America is settling down, reassessing his leadership, working with him to prevent a more pronounced crisis.

In one week, approval for his crisis management has taken a big turn. An ABC News poll shows Americans approve of how he is handling the crisis by 55 percent to 43, a reversal from one week earlier. A Hill-Harris poll of March 18 showed crisis management approval at 56 percent.

Why is Trump’s crisis management acumen not surprising? Because he is no stranger to crises. He managed global business operations through countless crises. He knows the field. Accordingly, he assembled an expert team, collected the best information, wasted no time sharing it, triaged with method not emotion, delegated and has been thinking big.

At the same time, he is filling critical information gaps, drawing good inferences, avoiding unjustified leaps. He has made clear his decisions are tied to experience, logic and data. Not denying uncertainty, he has asked collective responsibility.

He is honoring the Constitution, refusing to federalize the response, allowing states to set their own parameters. He has empowered governors, secured key resources, called on all Americans to do their part. He is open to out-of-the-box solutions, cleanly separated “urgent” from “important” – yet kept his eye on one goal, saving American lives.

He has acted to improve the odds of success by linking public and private ingenuity. As a seasoned leader, he has accepted risk – personal, political, legal, medical and financial, remembering that risk of action is balanced against risk of inaction.

Like a battlefield commander, he has delegated, empowered, adjusted solutions to facts based on what we know, suspect and anticipate. He is beyond the horizon, thinking about the enemy.

He has encouraged review of parallel cases, application of lessons from history – knowing it never repeats exactly. The Spanish flu was not Ebola or MERS. COVID-19 is not SARS or H1N1. Still, lessons from past crises are applied – border shutdowns, quarantines, cross-application of medicines, factory conversion.

More, Trump has neither over- nor underestimated this foe. He has communicated honestly and regularly. He has put fear in a box, hope on public display. He and the vice president have offered grounds for calm, served as an example.

Surely, he knows success will be incremental, and a collective effort. He has given credit widely, including to foes. He has one goal, lead America to win for America. Synergy comes from buy-in, melding life experiences, creating radiating circles of teamwork. He is doing that.

Winning in this crisis – as in past crises – will require unrelenting effort and unity of purpose. Trump is so far delivering. Good leaders know the slope in a crisis is steep, but for “going through hell,” Trump is proving a very capable crisis commander.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: covic19; presidenttrump; trumpadministration

1 posted on 03/31/2020 8:52:42 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
Amen.

Such a stark difference between Dr. Trump and Don Coomo.

Trump focuses on solutions and exudes optimism. Coomo focuses on problems and perpetuates fear.

2 posted on 03/31/2020 8:55:56 AM PDT by Texas Eagle (If it wasn't for double-standards, Liberals would have no standards at all -- Texas Eagle)
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To: Kaslin

Cuomo seems to be the only person in panic mode. He sure as hell isn’t positive in any way....or helpful in any way. The President has been kind enough to throw Cuomo a rope and drag Cuomo out of the morass that he himself, Cuomo, created.


3 posted on 03/31/2020 8:58:20 AM PDT by Sacajaweau
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To: Sacajaweau

Finally.....After many administrations of corrupt, dishonest, manipulating politicians, a real leader emerges at the head of our government when needed most. MAGA!


4 posted on 03/31/2020 9:05:10 AM PDT by mosaicwolf
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To: Sacajaweau

Exactly. I’m watching Don Coomo on Faux News and by his own admission, he is withholding supplies and equipment until the apex hits.


5 posted on 03/31/2020 9:07:40 AM PDT by Texas Eagle (If it wasn't for double-standards, Liberals would have no standards at all -- Texas Eagle)
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To: Kaslin

Excellent article and spot-on. Thanks for posting.

The author wrote “ America is settling down, reassessing his leadership, working with him to prevent a more pronounced crisis.”

I wish the Democrats could shelve their hatred of the man for just a bit and truly work with him. It would benefit all of us so much.

But even 19 years ago, they were able to put aside their hatred of Bush only for a couple weeks after 9/11 and then restarted their baseless attacks.


6 posted on 03/31/2020 9:11:53 AM PDT by ProtectOurFreedom
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To: Texas Eagle

When arrogant pr*** was screaming at the President, he kept saying now...now...now. He must be a real little monster to deal with behind closed doors.


7 posted on 03/31/2020 9:14:47 AM PDT by Sacajaweau
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To: Kaslin
What we are living is a historic moment in time.

Years from now, when history of this time is reviewed and written, Donald J. Trump will be seen as a POTUS who saved his nation in more ways than one. A businessman in the most important job in the world, conducting business in a crisis.

Anyone running against him, and even 2016 will be seen as a monumental talent for making money versus the establishment candidates of both parties.

While Pelosi will carry the stain of her antics into history, she will become a minor irrelevant player in the great scheme of things.

Does anyone remember who the Speaker of the House was in Dec. 1941? Not unless you look it up.

Great men come along very rarely in our history. They have been memorialized and revered for various reasons.

Reagan was the last truly great POTUS........until this moment in time.

When a wealthy, internationally known businessman came to run the worlds largest business, was doing well, and had to change tactics to address a life or death crisis. How he directs the recovery after this Wuhan crisis is over will be just as historic.

We are living in unmatched times. Something to tell your grandchildren about as you grow older.

8 posted on 03/31/2020 10:25:34 AM PDT by Wizdum
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To: Kaslin

Trying to counter some claims on social media. I’ve heard that because Trump and the governor of Florida are friends that Florida has gotten all the supplies it needed. While states he fights with have only gotten 18% of their supplies.


9 posted on 03/31/2020 12:16:37 PM PDT by Sam Gamgee
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