John F. Kennedy once said that “victory has a thousand fathers, but defeat is an orphan.”
Harry Truman once had a sign on his desk that declared “The buck stops here.”
Ronald Reagan once admitted that he was mistaken when he said he never traded arms for hostages.
Donald Trump now says that “the buck stops with everybody.”
Which of those statements connotes a weak leader? Which of them suggests the person who abides by it doesn’t want to take responsibility?
If you said the fourth one, we are on the same page. Donald Trump won’t accept responsibility for the dispute that has closed part of the federal government and has thrown hundreds of thousands of federal employees out of work, causing them varying degrees of financial hardship — all over whether to build The Wall along our southern border.
Trump’s equivocation speaks volumes about his lack of leadership. He is illustrating once more how he won’t accept what most of the rest of us believe already, that he cannot stand by what he said, that he would be willing to take the heat for shutting down the government.
Now he’s done it. Federal employees are hurting.
Own it, Mr. President.