Why ‘TACO' is the secret to Trump's resilience
Judging by his reaction to a reporter's question this past week, President Donald Trump doesn't like it when you ask him about 'TACO' — the reported Wall Street acronym for 'Trump Always Chickens Out,' an assumption that makes it safe to be in the market even when the president threatens Europe and China with intensifications of his trade war.
Even if he dislikes the barnyard-fowl comparison, though, the acronym gets at something that's crucial to Trump's political resilience. The willingness to swerve and backpedal and contradict himself is a big part of what keeps the president viable, and the promise of chickening out is part of Trump's implicit pitch to swing voters — reassuring them that anything extreme is also provisional, that he's always testing limits (on policy, on power) but also generally willing to pull back.
A case study: Just six weeks ago, I wrote a column describing the second Trump presidency as headed for political failure, while noting that a course correction was still possible.
That caveat was debatable, since Trump's post-'Liberation Day' polling was starting to look like President Joe Biden's polling numbers after the botched Afghanistan withdrawal. Once Biden hit the low 40s in the RealClearPolitics average, he never again reached 45 per cent approval: Some presidents just lose their mandate early and never get it back.
But since that column appeared, Trump has bobbed and weaved away from his most extreme China tariffs, he has achieved some kind of separation from Elon Musk and he has started complaining about 'crazy' Russian President Vladimir Putin while casting himself as the great would-be peacemaker of the Middle East. And lo and behold, his poll numbers have floated back up, not to genuine popularity but to a perfectly normal level for a president in a polarised country.
Loading
With a different president, you might say that this recovery happened despite the White House's various backtracks and reversals (plus various rebukes from the judiciary). But with Trump, it's more apt to say that it's happened because of these setbacks and recalibrations. Seeing Trump both check himself and be checked by others is what an important group of voters expect from his presidency. They like that Trump pressures institutions they distrust or dislike, from official Washington to elite universities, but their approval is contingent on a dynamic interaction, where he accepts counterpressure and retreats.
Ask Trump loyalists about this pattern, and they'll often insist that it's all just part of the Plan — that the president's apparent setbacks and volte-faces are just indicators of a strategic flexibility that was present all along. So, the seeming daftness of the Liberation Day tariffs is actually a brilliant way to get the markets to accept a more modest but still substantial tariff regime. Or letting Musk run wild with implausible promises about Department of Government Efficiency cost savings is just a way to open the hood of Cabinet agencies and let the president figure out how to control his own executive branch.
In some cases, these arguments can be partially persuasive. I think Trump's foreign policy, especially, is fundamentally improvisational in a way that's better suited than some of the more consistent alternatives to the difficult world we now inhabit. Even the seeming shamelessness of his swings can be defensible adaptations to complicated circumstances: It can make sense to try to negotiate with Putin and also to threaten Russia if the negotiations stall out — as it might make sense to be hawkish toward a stronger Iran in 2018 and conciliatory toward a weaker Iran in 2025, and so on.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sky News AU
9 minutes ago
- Sky News AU
JD Vance mocks DNC over latest failed attempt to troll Donald Trump
US Vice President JD Vance has mocked the Democratic National Convention following an anti-Donald Trump stunt. On Tuesday, the DNC parked a food truck near the Republican National Headquarters in Washington, DC, to troll the US President's tariff policies. The DNC's stunt, which saw a food truck displaying Trump dressed in a chicken suit, followed by the acronym TACO, meaning 'Trump Always Chickens Out'. TACO was reportedly used by Wall Street analysts when referring to Trump's tariffs, suggesting he'll walk back the reciprocal tariffs he announced in April. Vice President Vance and other conservatives mocked the DNC's actions as Democrats struggle to combat Trump's presidency. 'We have the lamest opposition in American history,' wrote Vance.

Sky News AU
34 minutes ago
- Sky News AU
‘Tampon' Tim blasted after hysterical meltdown about Trump
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz has been brutally roasted online after a meltdown he had over US President Donald Trump. The roast followed Walz's keynote address at the South Carolina Democratic Party's state convention. During the speech Walz discussed the brutal election loss the Democrats faced in 2024, and expressed how they lost the working class to Donald Trump. Walz then doubled down on his previous rhetoric of Donald Trump being a 'wannabe dictator' saying its time for Democrats to be a 'little meaner'. The Minnesota governor's remarks have been brutally roasted online, with many quick to criticise him

Sydney Morning Herald
42 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Gaza aid sites closed as Israel declares ‘combat zones'
Gaza aid distribution centres will be closed for the day on Wednesday, and the Israeli military warned that roads leading to them have been designated as 'combat zones'. The move comes after Palestinian health officials and witnesses said Israeli forces fired on people heading towards an aid distribution site on Tuesday, killing at least 27 people, in the third such incident in three days. The Israeli army said it fired 'near a few individual suspects' who left the designated route, approached its forces and ignored warning shots, and said it was looking into reports of casualties. It has previously denied firing on civilians or blocking them from reaching the aid sites. The US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) said its distribution centres would be closed for a day for 'update, organisation, and efficiency improvement work'. 'Please do not go to the site and follow general instructions. Operations will resume on Thursday', the group said in a post on Facebook. The GHF has also announced its new executive chairman as an American evangelical Christian leader who previously backed US President Donald Trump's proposal for the US to take over Gaza. Reverend Dr Johnnie Moore, an evangelical adviser to Trump during his first term, replaces former GHF chief Jake Wood, who resigned last week saying the organisation could not fulfil the principles of 'humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence'. In a statement posted on X, Moore said the group 'believes that serving the people of Gaza with dignity and compassion must be the top priority'. 'The old way of doing things just won't get it done,' he said.