The reflecting pool in Washington DC has something of a cursed history. It was built in the 1920s as a shallow pool designed to reflect – the clue is in the name – the Lincoln and Washington memorials for visitors to the National Mall.
But it was built badly. Washington DC is famously a swamp, and the pool’s foundations were badly designed. By the 2000s it was leaking an astronomical 500,000 litres of water every week through cracked, damaged foundations, and the water was routinely too filthy to reflect a thing.
It was rebuilt more-or-less from scratch in a three-year renovation costing $34 million, finally reopening in the summer of 2012. Within weeks, the pool was once again full of blooms of algae. It has returned perennially in the decade since, a seemingly unfixable problem. A particular nadir came in 2017, when the pool started filling up with dead ducks and ducklings.
Sombre, certainly, but maybe not the mood the pool’s designers were aiming for.
Donald Trump, then, can hardly be blamed for the reflecting pool’s woes – but he did seem absolutely confident that he, with his decades of experience in the construction industry, knew how to fix them.
Trump dispensed with plans to rework the filtration system, or deal with any of the complex issues plaguing the pool, and decided it could instead be fixed by painting it a darker shade of blue. Instead of taking years, it would be sorted in weeks – just in time for America’s 250th birthday. Trump’s administration paid a pool painting company millions of dollars to get it done.
Today, the pool is blue, open for business… and absolutely full of algae.
The world was treated on Tuesday to unedifying footage of dozens of staff pouring bottles of hydrogen peroxide into the water in a desperate bid to Make The Pool Reflect Again. It didn’t work. There are even suggestions that the new, darker blue has helped the algae thrive by slightly warming the water.
Visitors look at algae in the newly repainted reflecting pool. The Trump Administration spent $16 million on a no-bid contract to have the bottom of the pool painted ‘American flag blue’ (Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)Trump, in other words, waded into a complex problem that successive administrations failed to address, declared he alone could fix it, didn’t learn anything about the actual underlying issues, and fell flat on his face. Some readers might be spotting parallels between the reflecting pool and the President’s Middle East policy, but even just sticking to his misadventures in the capital provides no shortage of disasters.
Trump loves the magic of the Kennedys – he even appointed one to his cabinet – and likes to put on a show. So he took a major public interest in the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, trying to get it to put on the kind of shows he enjoys. He replaced the board, put his own man in charge as director and even added his name above the door.
Running a huge public arts centre, though, turns out to be complicated – especially when you’ve been publicly insulting everyone involved with it. Donors abandoned the Center in droves, performers dropped out and the institution quickly became unviable. Trying to cover up his failure, Trump appointed the Center’s head of facilities as its new director and announced he was shutting it down for at least two years for major renovations.
Sadly for Trump, he hadn’t gone through the proper channels for any of this, and a judge ordered that his name be removed from the building and his two-year construction plan be called off until it had the proper approvals.
Onlookers gather to watch workers removing Trump’s name from the Kennedy Center in Washington DC (Photo: Rahmat Gul/AP)The President has run into similar problems simply trying to renovate the house he lives in. Trump chaotically rushed in, demolishing the existing East Wing and rendering the White House bunker underneath it unusable. However, trying to build a new ballroom with no final plans in place, no permits and no process of any kind has completely run aground.
As a result, almost any time he’s in front of a camera, Trump descends into lengthy and largely incoherent rants as he tries to explain why building a new ballroom is actually an urgent matter of national security. Not even Jane Austen could have imagined ballrooms as such an essential component of political life.
Trump sees himself as a strongman and wants the world to see him in the same way. He thinks Congress and the Supreme Court work for him. Laws are things he gets to write, not things he has to follow. He seems to believe that every other nation has to do what he wants.
But it is a lot harder to project that image when you can’t even manage a home renovation or fix the pool at the bottom of your garden.
Trump is a man in a rush, particularly to leave a lasting impression on Washington DC. But by trying to build a legacy in the nation’s capital, he risks doing the opposite. He wants a legacy in marble, not one covered in algae.
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