April 15, 2011 8:17 PM

Donald Trump's "Celebrity Politician" Show

By
Dan Farber
Topics
In The News ,
Republicans ,
White House ,
Tea Party ,
Campaign 2012 ,
Obama Administration

Donald Trump speaks at the Conservative Political Action conference on February 10, 2011, in Washington.

(Credit: Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

OPINION: Donald Trump is serious about business, and perhaps a political career. When he is not hosting "Celebrity Apprentice," or wheeling and dealing properties, conducting beauty pageants and lending his luxury brand promise to bedsheets and stemware, he is cultivating and measuring his presidential aspirations.

"The Donald," as he is sometimes called, has been coy about declaring his presidential intentions, but he is working hard at playing the role of fledgling, outspoken candidate, captured in his  familiar refrain on the state of the nation: "The U.S. is becoming the laughing stock of the world."

Trump is exercising his skill in creating twists and turns to keep viewers and voters on the edge of their seats for his twin duties of reality show host and furtive presidential aspirant.

In fact, it's difficult to tell whether he is performing in "Celebrity Politician," a parallel reality show to "Celebrity Apprentice" in which he is a contestant applying for the job of running America, or merely a celebrity, billionaire host who gets to fire people after performing a set of challenges to raise money for charities on primetime TV and also want to change the direction of the country.

The 64-year-old Trump has voiced presidential interest in the past, and aligned himself at times with Republican, Democrat and independent parties. This time he is catering to the Tea Party and aligning with the fringe "birther" movement that questions President Obama's citizenship.

In another bow to more conservative voters, a web site, Should Trump Run?, run by a Trump senior executive and promoting his candidacy, includes an image of Trump with the adjoining quote: "It's cold outside...so where's global warming?" Trump also recently flip-flopped on earlier support for universal healthcare.

The suspense may be over soon after the season finale of "Celebrity Apprentice." According to spokesperson, Trump plans to piggyback on the May 22 season finale reveal of "Celebrity Apprentice" to reveal the time and place of a press conference at which time he may reveal whether he will be a Republican candidate for the presidential nomination.

Trump may be thinking seriously about the job of running America, but it's not clear if given the job by voters, he would relish the opportunity. Commander in Chief of the United States could give him a kind of international legitimacy he might crave, but he would also take on the most difficult, complex and serious job in the world on a stage that dwarfs the Miss Universe pageant his company co-produces with NBC Universal.

He told Talk 1300 radio host Fred Dicker, "I would rather not run. I love what I'm doing. You know I have a great company. I love doing it. I'm having fun. I have a nice life. This is not easy, and it's not necessarily fun."

Sounding like Sarah Palin, who said she would run if no one who met her expectations were in the hunt, Trump said, "But somebody has to take the bull by the horns. This country is in bad shape. We're laughed at. We're scoffed at. We're a joke throughout the world. Look at Libya. What a joke. We don't even know what we're doing over there," he said.

Trump has not been shy about criticizing the president and handicapping his chances. "I think he's done such a bad job. "I think he's been such a terrible president, that I really believe that if I were chosen to run against him, I would win," he told Dicker.

It's easy to act on the presidential election stage, but Trump, who likes to win, must be calculating the dim odds of succeeding, even with his surge in early polling among Republican candidates and friends telling him that he can win.

Obama is an incumbent building a massive war chest and riding an improving economy, and the Republican party wants to avoid another Hail Mary, unpredictable candidate. Of course, Trump said he could go the independent route, banking on voters dissatisfied with either party. But he has shown during his decades in the public eye that he prefers being Donald Trump the impresario to being a public servant.

Trump maintained that he isn't flirting with a presidential run to boost ratings for his reality show. "I don't need to do this for ratings on 'The Apprentice.' This is too important, our country is in trouble, our country is not being properly led," he told the Wall Street Journal.

But if he decides to run, he would need to expose his $2.7 billion financial empire (according to Forbes)  to the public. He boasted to Time that his finances are huge, "Far bigger than anyone knows. Far bigger than anyone would understand."

That statement sounds more like a Charlie Sheen #winning moment than the inspiring or more measured words of someone who wants to be taken seriously as the leader of the fragile free world.

But then, a more reasoned approach to campaigning doesn't necessarily deliver high ratings, and campaigns, like reality TV shows, live and die by their ratings, and polls, at least until the votes on election day are counted.

Watch: Donald Trump's potential run: Policy or publicity?


Add a Comment See all 39 Comments
by DebtSettlementPro April 28, 2011 6:19 PM EDT
Proof that Obama's Birth Certificate is a forgery!!

http://www.brasschecktv.com/page/1089.html
Reply to this comment
by san850 April 18, 2011 9:43 AM EDT
Trump is nothing more than a narcissistic, thinks-he-knows-it-all bag of wind who got lucky with a rich daddy. He's had one extravagant failure after another. His TV show has turned into a cheesy "Jerry Springer" look alike. I think he lost what little credibility he had left when he took on the "birther" nonsense and tried to act like his big shot investigation would uncover something "strange hiding in Hawaii". What a joke. The following link tells the REAL truth and shows just what a con man Trump really is:

http://factcheck.org/2011/04/donald-youre-fired/
Reply to this comment
by infantryman1968 April 18, 2011 9:31 AM EDT
by user000049586849302948603 April 17, 2011 12:31 PM EDT

When the saner cuts of the Republican party realize how hopelessly unelectable "The Donald" is, there is no way he will prevail in their primary. His ego is large enough, however, that it seems likely that he really will make an independent run which will just be hilarious, especially when Team Obama refuses to debate him because they don't recognize him as a legitimate candidate.


LOL

Who said they dont recognize You and Obama as a legal candidates?
Reply to this comment
by infantryman1968 April 18, 2011 9:29 AM EDT
by Tedsliver April 17, 2011 9:34 PM EDT

Donald should not run for president as he is not qualified.

LOL!

Acording to the U.S. Constitution, the only qualification for President of the United States is to be U.S. Born.

The rest is up to the Legal Citizens of the U.S.
Reply to this comment
by bobbyboobee April 18, 2011 1:25 AM EDT
Trump may be a lot of things but he's not stupid, so you had better pay attention. While the rest of the Republicans were basking in the secure knowledge that one of them would be nominated, and Trump was way down on the list in most minds and the polls, lo and behold, he recognizes that the Tea Partiers are rather a large group, and when you add to them all the racists that have taken to heart and believe fervently the Republican mantra broadcast over and over again that Obama is not a citizen, and he's put them firmly in his pocket (he's risen to the top of the polls just on this one ploy) while the rest of the party stood around complacently. Laugh at him at your peril.
Reply to this comment
by lelectra1 April 17, 2011 10:08 AM EDT
What a buffoon. He fits right in with the Republican cartoon characters.

Inherited big dough from Daddy, declared bankruptcy what, like 3 x, and goes around calling women he disagrees with pigs and boasting non stop about his "business" skills.

And then there's that hair.
Reply to this comment
by taylorsucram April 17, 2011 1:29 AM EDT
Wow, once again IQs have dropped 10 points in America! Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney's changes of heart on gay rights, his Government HealthCare Law and abortion do little to help his second presidential effort. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich is twice divorced and says whatever comes to his mind. And former Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour has a record as a lobbyist and didn't have a problem with the Klan in Yazoo City. So, of course Former Senator Rick (I find it almost remarkable for a black man to say 'now we are going to decide who are people and who are not people) Santorum decides to explore a Presidential run. Then we have "The Donald", a man who knows the Bankruptcy Laws, inside and out!

I guess "The Donald" looked around and said .."Heck, if the American people elected G.W. Bush TWICE, Considered John McCain & Sarah Palin, I'm sure they'll vote for me."

GOP MESSAGE;
Dear President Obama, we will not raise the Debt Ceiling unless you repeal Obamacare and privatize Medicare. We will destroy this Great Country in order to save it from you! Resign from office immediately and go back to Kenya or Chicago or wherever you came from. ~ Signed The GOP
Reply to this comment
by WTFisupwiththat86 April 16, 2011 7:19 PM EDT
I hope this Moron runs with Palin as his VP choice so they can implode together. Both of these clowns are a running joke and have no business trying to get into the political game especially with all the baggage they bring with them. Then to hear this idiot go on about how we should just take the oil of Libya and Iraq is like listening to some of the old speeches served up by Hitler during the 1930's about the Sudetenland. He is an embarrassment to the American political process and should be ignored by all reasonable people interested in a real solution. I say this because Donald Trump represent the evil that lurks within all of us and is making every effort to appeal to our darker angels and this is what makes him so dangerous. I wouldn't be so concerned if there weren't so many feeble minded people out there just waiting for someone like him to happen along so that they can follow his lead.
Reply to this comment
by karlejohn April 16, 2011 7:10 PM EDT
I wouldn't buy a new car from Mr. Trump. If you are a winner, you don't have to go around disrepecting our President. Tell the people what are you going to do for America. Stop the B. S!
Reply to this comment
by san850 April 16, 2011 5:33 PM EDT
I have voted on both sides of the aisle over my many years...consider myself more of an independent but in the past have leaned more to the right than the left. However, IF I was a Republican now I would be so ashamed to admit it with the nonsense going on within the party and the obvious crackpots that they produce and support.

I sincerely believe that President Obama is interested in what's best for the middle class and recognizes the fact that the more we do for corporate America, the more jobs they still outsource, the more taxes they still avoid paying, and the more money they still shelter in offshore accounts. Trump is no more than a publicity hound that loves the spotlight and will say and do anything to get it...just like Palin and a few of the other potentials. He cares nothing about middle America...he runs with the Big Boys.
Reply to this comment
by sallychicago April 16, 2011 9:02 PM EDT
@San850--do you think that Trump would show his tax returns? No way! Do you think he would answer the public's questions about his three marriages and cheating on the first wife? No way! There's the answer to If Trump will run.
by guest173 April 17, 2011 3:38 AM EDT
sallychicago, john mccain had cheating issues with his first wife, also too many presidents have cheated, fdr had a mistress, most people just want to ignore that part of people's lives and let it go, although we'd be better off if we didn't pamper cheaters
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