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Sobriety Test – The Dispatch

A few days into the president’s first term, his new executive orders banning certain foreigners from entering the United States were described by Lawfare founder Benjamin Wittes as a case of “malevolence tempered by incompetence.” Thank goodness that the orders were so poorly drafted, Wittes argued, as their sloppiness harmed their chances of standing up in court.

“Malevolence tempered by incompetence” as a description of Donald Trump’s M.O. stuck, but Wittes reversed the formulation three years later. With COVID beginning to spread in the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention fumbled its early attempt to develop a test for the virus; meanwhile, the president focused on protecting his strongman image by downplaying the threat and overhyping his administration’s response. That was an example of “incompetence exacerbated by malevolence,” per Wittes and co-author Quinta Jurecic.

It’s often not easy to tell whether malevolence or incompetence is the cause or the effect in Trump policies. For instance, which is which in the matter of Kilmar Abrego Garcia?

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