Trump’s frustration and fury rupture alliances, threaten agenda
Frustrated
by his Cabinet and angry that he has not received enough credit for his
handling of three successive hurricanes, President Trump is now lashing out,
rupturing alliances and imperiling his legislative agenda, numerous White House
officials and outside advisers said Monday.
In a matter
of days, Trump has torched bridges all around him, nearly imploded an informal
deal with Democrats to protect young undocumented immigrants brought to the
country as children, and plunged himself into the culture wars on issues
ranging from birth control to the national anthem.
In doing so,
Trump is laboring to solidify his standing with his populist base and return to
the comforts of his campaign — especially after the embarrassing defeat of
Sen. Luther Strange in last month’s Alabama GOP special election, despite the
president’s trip there to campaign with the senator.
Sen. Bob
Corker’s brutal assessment of Trump’s fitness for office — warning
that the president’s reckless behavior could launch the nation “on the path to
World War III” — also hit like a thunderclap inside the White House, where
aides feared possible ripple effects among other Republicans on Capitol Hill.
After a
caustic volley of Twitter insults between Trump and Corker, a Tennessee
Republican who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, few GOP leaders
came to the president’s defense Monday — though few sided openly with Corker,
either. The most vocal Trump defender was the one under the president’s
direction, Vice President Pence.
Trump in
recent days has shown flashes of fury and left his aides, including White House
chief of staff John F. Kelly, scrambling to manage his outbursts. He has been
frustrated in particular with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who was
reported last week to have earlier called the president a “moron.” Trump’s
Sunday morning Twitter tirade against Corker caught staffers by surprise,
although the president had been brooding over the senator’s comment a few days
earlier about Trump’s “chaos” endangering the nation.
One Trump
confidant likened the president to a whistling teapot, saying that when he does
not blow off steam, he can turn into a pressure cooker and explode. “I think we
are in pressure cooker territory,” said this person, who spoke on the condition
of anonymity to talk candidly.
This
portrait of the president increasingly isolated in the capital city is based on
interviews with 18 White House officials, outside advisers and other Trump
associates.
In a
late-afternoon, unsolicited email to reporters Monday, Pence’s office blasted
out a blanket response under the vice president’s name addressing “criticisms
of the president.” The statement bemoaned “empty rhetoric and baseless attacks”
against Trump while touting his handling of global threats, from Islamic State
terrorists to North Korea.
“That’s what
American leadership on the world stage looks like and no amount of criticism at
home can diminish those results,” the statement concluded.
But Pence’s
words did little to reassure some Trump allies, who fear that the president’s
feud with Corker could cause more trouble for the administration and further
unravel threadbare relationships on Capitol Hill.
One Trump
loyalist — noting that Corker has many more friends in the Senate than Trump
does — said the rift could dash chances for a tax law overhaul or other
meaningful legislation. “His presidency could be doomed,” said this person, who
spoke on the condition of anonymity so as not to alienate the president or his
staff.
“We have
been watching the slow-motion breakup of the Republican Party, and Trump is
doing what he can to speed it up,” said Patrick Caddell, a veteran
pollster who has worked with Stephen K. Bannon, Trump’s former chief
strategist, who now runs Breitbart News, a conservative website.
“Trump is
firmly placing himself on the outside, trying to become an almost independent
president,” Caddell said. “He knows that many people will be with him, that he
helps himself when he’s not seen as the Republican president. But what about
his program? That’s the question — and possibly the cost of what he’s doing.”
Inside the
White House, reaction to Corker’s comments has been mixed. Some Trump aides
believe it is dangerous for the president to fight with Corker, the chairman of
a powerful Senate committee who is not running for reelection and therefore
feels he has nothing to lose.
Other Trump
aides blame Corker for what they consider an act of betrayal, arguing that he
started the feud in a bid for relevance by a lame-duck lawmaker. They also
accuse Corker of hypocrisy, noting that he was chummy with Trump and did not
voice any concerns about his leadership style when he thought he might be
picked as vice president or secretary of state.
Christopher
Ruddy, chief executive of Newsmax and a Trump friend, said: “Donald Trump never
truly severs relationships. There is always a dialogue. And with Corker, this
isn’t a total endpoint. Trump sees relationships as negotiations, and that’s
what they’re in.”
Many in the
White House say they appreciate the disciplined structure Kelly has
implemented, but it has left Trump without the free-flowing conversations with
staff and outsiders that he had come to relish. These familiar faces often
buoyed Trump’s mood and gave him a safe sounding board, even if they at times
interfered with the workings of the government.
Trump is
also without his longtime aide-de-camp and former head of security, Keith
Schiller, who departed the White House this fall as director of Oval Office
operations. Schiller was a constant at Trump’s side for years and was adept at
soothing his foul moods. His absence has left Trump with few generational peers
with whom he feels comfortable venting about his staff or his rivals, or just
talking about sports, according to some of the president’s friends.
Trump,
meanwhile, has been seeking regular counsel from friends outside the
government, including investor Thomas J. Barrack Jr., who chaired his
inauguration.
Among some
in Trump’s circle, Barrack has been buzzed about as a possible replacement for
Kelly, should tensions between the president and his top aide become
unsustainable. But people familiar with Barrack’s thinking said he feels he can
best serve Trump as a friend and outside adviser, rather than as a member of
the White House staff.
The
president has given no indication publicly that he is mulling another change
and over the weekend heaped praise on Kelly. “John Kelly is one of the best
people I’ve ever worked with,” Trump told reporters Saturday. “He’s doing an
incredible job, and he told me for the last two months he loves it more than
anything he’s ever done. . . . He will be here, in my opinion, for the entire
seven remaining years.”
Still, Trump
is facing political head winds, including from his base. The Alabama
Senate primary last month, in which a far-right challenger defeated a
more establishment Republican whom the president had endorsed, served as a
warning flare for Trump’s team, highlighting the risk he could run if he
alienates the core supporters who helped lift him to electoral victory.
The
president has groused to numerous White House aides about his concerns over his
popularity with “my people” — his base. He blames the Republican establishment
and others for failing to enact his agenda and making him look feckless, and is
unhappy with losing in Alabama, according to people briefed on White House
deliberations.
Trump also
made it known to several people that he wished to have a rally in North
Carolina over the weekend and not just a fundraiser — but he ultimately flew
down for only the fundraiser, spending just two hours on the ground in
Greensboro. Trump complained that he wished he had gotten back out in front of
the rowdy crowds he loves, these people said.
“Donald
Trump got elected with minority support from the American electorate, and most
of his efforts thus far are focused on energizing and solidifying the
40 percent of Americans who were with him, primarily by attacking the 60
percent who were not,” Republican pollster Whit Ayres said. “That is great for
his supporters, but it makes it very difficult to accomplish anything in a
democracy.”
Trump’s
political calculus is complicated by Bannon’s return to his previous role at
the helm of Breitbart. Now working to forward a nationalist agenda from outside
the confines of the administration, Bannon has vowed war against any
Republican lawmakers he believes are insufficiently conservative or who fail to
help push through the agenda he and Trump outlined during the campaign.
Bannon is
recruiting GOP primary challengers in nearly all of the 2018 Senate races,
looking for candidates who could defeat Republicans he views as too
establishment and highlight the president’s stances on issues such as
immigration and trade.
The White
House effort to woo back the populist wing of the party after stumbling in the
Alabama race has been mixed. When Trump advisers contacted Breitbart writers
Sunday to highlight a list of hard-line immigration principles the
administration had just released, there was little enthusiasm for the White
House’s outreach and skepticism of Trump’s commitment to combating illegal
immigration, according to two people familiar with the exchanges.
Even the
Trump family has become a flash point. On Monday, the president’s first
and third wives — Ivana and Melania, respectively — engaged in a public spat.
In an
interview with ABC’s “Good Morning America” to promote her new book, “Raising
Trump,” Ivana Trump, the mother of the president’s three eldest children, said:
“I’m basically first Trump wife. Okay? I’m first lady.”
The actual
first lady, Melania Trump, did not let the slight go unanswered. Her
spokeswoman at the White House, Stephanie Grisham, issued a statement
dismissing Ivana’s comments as “attention-seeking and self-serving noise.”
FROM The Washington Post.com
No comments