Trump’s die-hard supporters fuming after an apparent about-face on ‘dreamers’
Staunch
conservative allies of President Trump have erupted in anger and incredulity
after Democrats late Wednesday announced that the president had agreed to
pursue a legislative deal that would protect thousands of young undocumented
immigrants from deportation but not secure Trump’s signature campaign promise:
building a massive wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.
Nearing
midnight and into Thursday, social media accounts came alive as elected
officials and activists on the right dashed off tweets and posts to share their
shock.
And in
between those posts, there was a flurry of fuming calls and text messages — a
blaring political fire alarm among Trump’s die-hard supporters.
“The reality
is sinking in that Trump administration is on the precipice of turning into an
establishment presidency,” Sam Nunberg, a former Trump campaign adviser, said
in an interview early Thursday morning.
While the
initial wave of fury could change direction as new details emerge, the torrent
represented the first major break of Trump’s devoted base from the president on
a core issue.
Rep. Steve
King (R-Iowa), one of the GOP’s biggest immigration hawks, issued a dramatic
warning to the president after he scrolled through news reports.
“If AP is
correct, Trump base is blown up, destroyed, irreparable, and disillusioned
beyond repair,” King tweeted, referencing an Associated Press story on the
bipartisan agreement.
He added,
“No promise is credible.”
Conservative
radio talk show host Laura Ingraham, who is friendly with Trump, mocked him for
seeming to shelve the pledge that has animated his supporters since his
campaign’s launch.
“Exactly
what @realDonaldTrump campaigned on. Not,” Ingraham wrote on Twitter. She later
added, “BUILD THE WALL! BUILD THE WALL! … or … maybe … not really.”
Trump tried
to calm the conservative outrage early Thursday in a series of tweets that
insisted the border wall “will continue to be built” and that no deal was
hashed out with Democrats on the undocumented young immigrants known as
“dreamers.”
“No deal was
made last night on DACA. Massive border security would have to be agreed to in
exchange for consent. Would be subject to vote,” Trump wrote, referring to
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, an Obama-era program that has
allowed 690,000 “dreamers” to work and go to school without fear of
deportation.
As he
departed the White House on Thursday en route to Florida, which has been
ravaged by Hurricane Irma, Trump told reporters that “the wall will come later
… The wall is going to be built, it'll be funded a little bit later.”
“We are
working on a plan for DACA,” Trump said, calling the negotiations “fairly
close” to concluding. Congressional Republican leaders, he added, were “very
much on board” with his position.
Conservative
polemicist Ann Coulter, who wrote a book titled “In Trump We Trust”, did not
buy the president's explanation.
“At this
point, who DOESN'T want Trump impeached?” Coulter tweeted on Thursday morning.
Breitbart
News, the conservative website now run by former White House chief strategist
Stephen K. Bannon, quickly became a gathering place for aggrieved Trump
backers. Readers congregated by the thousands in the comments section for an
article with a bright red headline: “Amnesty Don.”
Days
earlier, Bannon said on CBS’s “60 Minutes” that he was “worried about losing
the House now because of this, because of DACA,” arguing that Republican voters
would lack enthusiasm for Trump and the party if they felt it was drifting to
the center on immigration.
“If this
goes all the way down to its logical conclusion, in February and March it will
be a civil war inside the Republican Party that will be every bit as vitriolic
as 2013,” Bannon said, referencing the stalled fight that year over a
comprehensive immigration bill. “And to me, doing that in the springboard of
primary season for 2018 is extremely unwise.”
“This a
betrayal of the highest order,” a Breitbart editor, who was not authorized to
speak publicly, said in a phone call late Wednesday. “Donald Trump should be
ashamed of himself. He wasn’t elected to do this.”
The editor
was mostly echoed by the site’s readers:
“Put a fork
in Trump. He is done.”
“PRIMARY
TIME!!!!”
“What a HUGE
let down.”
“I can
reconcile Trump caving on virtually any issue, Amnesty and not building the
wall are not one of them.”
Adding to
the tumult in the deep of night: conflicting accounts over what exactly Trump
and Democrats had brokered.
Aides to
Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) and House Minority Leader
Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) asserted that Trump had agreed not to request wall
funding as part of their pact to soon move legislation to help undocumented
immigrants who are protected under the executive order.
White House
Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders tweeted at 10:21 p.m.: “While DACA and
border security were both discussed, excluding the wall was certainly not
agreed to.”
Eleven
minutes later, Matt House, an adviser to Schumer, tweeted: “The President made
clear he would continue pushing the wall, just not as part of this agreement.”
Sanders’s
Twitter assurance, however, did little to calm the roiled voices, especially in
the populist-nationalist wing of the Republican Party — a wing deeply linked to
Trump.
“Deep State
Wins, Huge Loss for #MAGA,” Fox Business anchor Lou Dobbs tweeted, alluding to
Trump’s “Make America Great Again” campaign slogan.
Others who
have supported Trump’s immigration positions took a wait-and-see approach amid
the chaos.
“My sense is
that he told Chuck and Nancy what they wanted to hear, and they heard what they
wanted to hear. I think there could be some mischief-making on the part of
Schumer since the White House is walking it back,” said Mark Krikorian, an
immigration hard-liner who runs the Center for Immigration Studies, in an
interview.
Meanwhile,
Fox News host Sean Hannity, who is in regular contact with Trump, directed his
ire over the developments not at the president but at GOP leaders on Capitol
Hill.
“Well Mitch
GREAT JOB!” Hannity tweeted, referring to Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell (R-Ky.). “You failed so miserably with Healthcare and ‘excessive
expectations’ now @POTUS has to deal with Dem Leaders!”
Hannity
added later, “I blame R's. They caused this. They wanted him to fail and now
pushed him into arms of political suicide — IF TRUE.”
FROM Washsington post.com
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