Mary Trump on the end of Uncle Donald: all he has
now is breaking things
The president will be having ‘meltdowns upon
meltdowns’, according to his niece, who sees poetic justice in the lies and
cheating now coming back to bite him
Mary Trump,
as told to Jude Rogers
@juderogers
Sun 8 Nov
2020 07.20 GMTLast modified on Sun 8 Nov 2020 15.50 GMT
This is how
the most colossal and fragile ego on the planet deals with losing the US
election: he does not deal with it at all.
My uncle’s
speech late on election night wasn’t just entirely mendacious from beginning to
end. It was also deeply dangerous. It’s one thing for random Republicans to
call a legitimate election into question, but this was the head of the
government. The consequences of that action should not be underestimated.
This is
what Donald’s going to do: he’s not going to concede, although who cares.
What’s worse is he’s not going to engage in the normal activities that
guarantee a peaceful transition. All he’s got now is breaking stuff, and he’s
going to do that with a vengeance. I’ve always known how cruel he can be.
Shortly after the 2016 election, when I’d see him being particularly cruel, I
would think about how he treated my father [Fred Trump Jr, Donald’s older
brother, who died of alcoholism at 43]. He took away our family health
insurance after his father, my grandfather, died – this was when my nephew
needed round-the-clock nursing care, which we then couldn’t afford. That is the
kind of man he is.
After January, things look bleak for Donald.
He has $400m of debt coming. Why would his lenders pay him any slack?
He’ll be
having meltdowns upon meltdowns right now. He has never been in a situation
like this before. What’s interesting is that Donald has never won anything
legitimately in his entire life, but because he has been so enabled by people
along the way, he has never lost anything either. He’s the kind of person who
thinks that even if you steal and cheat to win, you deserve to win.
But there
is some poetic justice here because he has been cheating for months. Now his
tactics are coming back to bite him. He told Republicans not to vote by mail
and they didn’t, but the result is he has been experiencing this slow drip-drip
of disaster over the past few days. Oh, you have these huge margins! Now your
margins are shrinking. Oh, Joe Biden’s ahead. Now his margins are growing. It
must have been like slow torture, but he set up this failure for himself.
The fact
that the Republicans have done better than expected in Congress and the Senate
will have made him extraordinarily angry. It means that people were voting
against Donald Trump in this election, but not necessarily against this party.
That will have added so much salt to his narcissistic wounds.
Also, his
supporters are going away. From what I understand, the thing that really ruined
his election night was Fox News – his safe zone – calling Arizona days earlier
than everyone else. That burst his bubble. Then Twitter was flagging all his
posts and deleting them, and other more legitimate news outlets were cutting
away from his speeches. But this begs the question: why weren’t they doing this
a month ago, or even four years ago, before the last election? It’s good this
is happening now because maybe the next two-and-half months won’t be the
nightmare we expect, but it’s too late.
I worry
about what Donald’s going to do in that time to lash out. He will go as far as
he can to delegitimise the new administration, then he’ll pass pardons that
will demoralise us, and sign a flurry of executive orders. Remember, he will
also still be in charge of the US response to the pandemic. There could be a
million Americans dead by then under his watch.
After
January, things look bleak for Donald. He has more than $400m of debt coming in
the next four years. Why at this point would his lenders cut him any slack? He
has never paid anyone back. His businesses are in the tank. He has destroyed
his brand.
He is going
to be a factor in courtrooms in New York City more than he’s going to be a
factor in politics, I think. His secretary of defence has already submitted his
resignation, and I think there will be more of that. The Republicans might need
him for the January run-offs in Georgia, but he could be considered a
liability. If he’s acting like a crazy person, senators are going to keep their
distance. People will move away from him if there’s nothing in it for them any
more.
It’s not
like he has any friends, anyway. It’s grim for him. Donald Jr, Ivanka and Eric
also know their relationship with their father is both conditional and transactional.
I have been saying since 2016 that I was going to have to change my name. I
think they’re going to have to change theirs.
As for
saying he’ll run in 2024, that’s just a face-saving exercise. It’s a way of
distracting him from the fact that he’s probably going to prison. But the worst
thing Donald’s looking at isn’t financial difficulties or the prospect of jail.
It’s becoming irrelevant. I don’t think he would ever recover from that.
Mary Trump
is a psychologist and author of Too Much and Never Enough


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