Donald Trump's White House is on fire — and not in a good way.

The leading figures in American business are embarrassed to be associated with the president, even though he has promised to cut their taxes and regulations.

Now his "Manufacturing Council" and "Strategic and Policy Forum" have been disbanded. That those bodies weren't doing much to begin with mirrors the Potemkin quality of the Trump White House itself.

On-camera events, like the one aides failed to pull off on infrastructure on Tuesday, seek to create the illusion of progress on a policy agenda. But here's where the White House really stands, now that corporate America is bolting for the door:

Nearly seven months after Inauguration Day the administration still hasn't proposed an infrastructure plan.

Neither has the administration proposed a plan for tax reform, the next big issue on the horizon.

Nor has the administration ever proposed its own health-care plan to replace Obamacare. Trump keeps hectoring Republican congressional leaders to continue trying after their efforts failed, even though they want to move on.