Opinion
Ross
Douthat
Why Can’t
Trump’s Domestic Policy Be More Like His Foreign Policy?
Oct. 11,
2025
Ross
Douthat
By Ross
Douthat
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/11/opinion/trump-foreign-policy-domestic.html
Opinion
Columnist
When
Donald Trump was first elected president, foreign policy seemed like the zone
of greatest danger, the place where a political novice promising to remake the
world order was most likely to blunder into true catastrophe.
Instead,
Trump’s first-term foreign policy was broadly successful, with more stability,
fewer dramatic stumbles and more breakthroughs than his domestic policy
efforts. And it was much more successful than the rolling crises and debacles
of the Biden presidency, a contrast that was one of the underrated cases for
Trump’s restoration.
Now, with
the provisional deal to end the war in Gaza, the pattern of Trump 1.0 is
reasserting itself. As a domestic leader the president is powerful but
unpopular, with a scant legislative agenda and an increasingly vendetta-driven
public image. But on the world stage he is currently much more successful
(allowing, yes, for strong skepticism about the administration’s China
strategy).
If peace
in Ukraine remains elusive, Trump has induced Europe to bear more of the burden
without yielding to the Russians, as many critics feared. The Iranian nuclear
program and terror networks have been hammered without major blowback. And now
there is the possibility of a real breakthrough in Israel and Palestine, an
achievement that’s clearly the result of the White House’s strong-arming
diplomatic efforts.
All of
which raises a question: What if Trump’s domestic policy were more like his
foreign policy? Yes, presidents stymied at home often find it easier to
maneuver overseas; that pattern is hardly unique to Trump. But there are still
a few keys to his success on the world stage that, if applied at home, might
make his domestic efforts more popular.
First,
float above ideology. Trump’s first-term foreign policy team was staffed by
traditional Republican hawks; his second has been divided between hawks and
would-be realists, who have often feuded viciously with one another. But in
both periods Trump himself has moved easily between different orientations —
sometimes behaving like a conventional hawk, sometimes like a realist or a
dove, going hyper-Zionist one moment and putting extra pressure on Benjamin
Netanyahu the next, and generally refusing to let any single ideological camp
rule his agenda.
On key
domestic issues, by contrast, Trump has never quite shaken free of the
pre-existing G.O.P. consensus, which is why his populist presidency has
repeatedly delivered unpopular tax-and-spending legislation, overweighted to
the interests of corporations and the rich. Meanwhile, various potential
projects that might break this mold, from infrastructure and industrial policy
to family policy, have been disappointing or stillborn.
That’s
partially because Trump has never found a consistent way to make deals with his
political opposition, a contrast to the second key to his foreign policy
success: Be open for dealmaking with everyone. Iran’s mullahs, Vladimir Putin,
Kim Jong-un, the Taliban … even when nothing comes of it or the whole thing
ends in bombing raids, Trump is eager to have the conversation, to look for the
unexpected bargain, the outside-the-box deal.
Critics
will say that this is because Trump likes strongmen like Kim and Putin more
than he likes fellow Americans who happen to be Democrats. But he’s also made
deals with overseas figures whom he definitely doesn’t love, from left-leaning
Eurocrats to now the leaders of Hamas.
It’s only
in domestic politics that he’s been unable to consistently execute the pivot
from insulting rivals on social media one day to making important bargains with
them the next. And despite all the “America First” talk, it’s only in domestic
politics that he’s been a true unilateralist, exploring the frontiers of
executive power in ways that a future president could reverse — as opposed to a
situation like the Gaza deal, where the hopes for its durability rest on
Pan-Arab commitment, not just American power.
One
reason for this difference is that in foreign policy he has followed a third
rule: Let business-oriented outsiders run your negotiations. The fact that
figures like Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner have seemingly done better — or at
the very least no worse — than credentialed diplomatic professionals has
striking implications for how we think about expertise in foreign policy. But
it also contrasts with Trumpian domestic policy, where in the first term
outsider figures like Kushner and Steven Mnuchin played notable roles, but
where more second-term power is in the hands of committed partisan fighters
like Stephen Miller and Russell Vought.
It is
Trump who has given them that power, to be clear, and many of the differences
I’m describing have clearly been consciously chosen by the president. Foreign
policy is for grand achievements and the pursuit of Nobel Prizes, it seems,
while the domestic front is where he hopes to get revenge for years of
investigations and prosecutions.
If
there’s anything that Middle Eastern politics should teach the president,
though, it’s that true success lies somewhere outside the cycle of vengeance —
if, that is, you want your victories to last.
Ross
Douthat has been an Opinion columnist for The Times since 2009. He is also the
host of the Opinion podcast “Interesting Times.” He is the author, most
recently, of “Believe: Why Everyone Should Be Religious.” @DouthatNYT •
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