海角大神

Why Trump's palace intrigue matters

Chatter about who's up (economic adviser Gary Cohn) and who's down (chief strategist Steve Bannon) all seems like so much schoolyard gossip. But it's a window on President Trump's evolving policy positions. 

|
Evan Vucci/AP/File
White House chief strategist Steve Bannon, right, and others, watch as President Donald Trump signs an executive order in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington. Also standing behind the president are other staff and advisers (from left) Reince Priebus, Peter Navarro, Jared Kushner, Stephen Miller.

The breathless coverage of a Trump White House reportedly gripped by palace intrigue is enough to keep a reader鈥檚 head spinning.

Chief strategist Steve Bannon is about to be fired. Or will he quit? Maybe neither, but his clout has certainly waned. Stephen Miller, once a Bannon acolyte, is Economic adviser Gary Cohn, a Wall Street man and past donor to top Democrats,

All of this may sound like so much schoolyard gossip, but it matters. The declining White House status of the populist-nationalist Mr. Bannon has telegraphed the rise of the more-moderate, establishment-oriented 鈥済lobalists鈥 鈥 foremost, Mr. Cohn, Mr. Kushner, and his wife, Ivanka Trump.

That, in turn, has led to a stark turnabout by Trump on a range of issues: NATO is no longer derided as 鈥渙bsolete.鈥 China will not be branded a 鈥渃urrency manipulator.鈥 Trump no longer wants to eliminate the Export-Import Bank. He might reappoint Janet Yellen as Federal Reserve chair. And last week, Trump ordered air strikes against the Syrian government, after years of tweeting that the US should not intervene.聽

All of this points to a core fact about Trump that was well-known from the beginning of his campaign 鈥 that above all, he is results-oriented.

鈥淲hat could make the Trump presidency successful is that he鈥檚 not wedded to a particular ideology,鈥 says Republican strategist Ford O鈥機onnell. 鈥淒onald Trump was not elected to be president of the Republican Party or a doctrinaire conservative. He is about putting people back to work and getting things done, and he鈥檒l move around the spectrum to do it.鈥

Some campaign promises remain sacrosanct. A conservative, Neil Gorsuch, has filled the long-vacant Supreme Court seat. The Trump administration is cracking down on illegal immigration, and . Plans for a wall on the US-Mexico border continue apace.

Trump is also proceeding with plans to reduce the size of government and eliminate regulations. Though he lifted his federal hiring freeze this week, he has tasked his budget office with crafting That鈥檚 in keeping with Bannon鈥檚 goal of 鈥渄econstructing the administrative state.鈥

Smaller role for Bannon

But Bannon himself is, by many indications, being marginalized. Last week Trump signed off on Bannon鈥檚 removal from the principals鈥 committee of the National Security Council, a move orchestrated by the new national security adviser, H.R. McMaster. and chief of staff Reince Priebus to work out their differences with Kushner.

This week, Trump belittled Bannon in two newspaper interviews. 鈥淭rump won鈥檛 definitively say he still backs Bannon,鈥 read . In the story, Trump said that he liked Bannon, but noted that he had joined the campaign late, after winning the GOP nomination. 鈥淚鈥檓 my own strategist,鈥 Trump said, a line he repeated the next day.

Bannon鈥檚 problem isn鈥檛 necessarily his ideology. By the president鈥檚 own accounting, Trump likes to hear competing points of view and then make his decisions. The problem is that Bannon quickly attained a larger-than-life profile 鈥 dubbed 鈥淧resident Bannon鈥 (mostly by Trump foes), appearing on the cover of Time magazine as 鈥淭he Great Manipulator,鈥 depicted on 鈥淪aturday Night Live鈥 as the Grim Reaper.

Trump does not like to be overshadowed. His modus operandi is 鈥渘ever stop being the center of attention,鈥 says Trump biographer Gwenda Blair.

Another non-negotiable with Trump is his family. 鈥淏annon got himself caught up in family business, and it鈥檚 unwinnable for him,鈥 says Mr. O鈥機onnell. 鈥淭he question is not, is his influence diminished, but can he stay in the administration.鈥

There is some suggestion that it might be safer for Trump to keep Bannon inside the tent than to kick him out. But the larger question may be: How did Bannon go from being a critical member of Trump鈥檚 inner circle to being elbowed out?

鈥淚 think Steve made an error by not spending any of his political capital to bring other Trump-ites and non-globalists into the White House circle,鈥 said . 鈥淭herefore now he鈥檚 alone and he鈥檚 surrounded.鈥

Mr. Stone, a longtime Republican operative and informal Trump adviser, added that he thinks his friend Bannon, perhaps unfairly, 鈥渢akes the rap for the fiasco surrounding health care鈥 鈥 a reference to the failed effort in the House to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act. Stone said he felt Mr. Priebus 鈥渟hould be wearing a bit more of that.鈥

鈥淭he travel ban is also probably counting against him,鈥 Stone said, referring to the administration鈥檚 efforts to temporarily ban non-US travelers from certain countries from entering the country 鈥 an initiative that is on hold in the courts. 鈥淭hough I would argue that in Donald Trump鈥檚 case he only suffers politically not when he鈥檚 defeated but when he stops trying.鈥

Shakeup inevitable?

All administrations go through growing pains. President Bill Clinton鈥檚 loose style led to early shakeups of his White House. President Jimmy Carter also struggled, surrounding himself with people from his home state of Georgia and not enough experienced Washington hands. Trump, like other 鈥渙utsider鈥 presidents, has eschewed insiders, but as a result, he has an inner circle that lacks governing experience.

Just four months into his presidency, Mr. Clinton, a Democrat, brought in David Gergen, who had advised three previous presidents, all Republicans. As Trump closes in on the symbolically important 100-day mark in office, Washington observers are waiting for the inevitable shakeup, and watching to see if Trump brings in any 鈥渨ise men鈥 鈥 or women.

Increasingly, Trump is bringing people like him, wealthy New Yorkers, into his inner circle 鈥 people like Stephen Schwarzman, CEO of Blackstone Group, . It鈥檚 a natural human impulse to surround oneself with people who have a similar background and worldview. Goldman Sachs has a large contingent of alumni in Trump world, including Cohn, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, and Deputy National Security Adviser Dina Powell.

Bannon is also a Goldman alum, but stylistically and ideologically he is not of that world. His scruffy appearance and adherence to set him apart. Before joining the Trump team, Bannon was CEO of Breitbart News, which was known for nationalist-populist content that is at times racist and misogynist.

Now, it seems, the Bannon phase of Trump鈥檚 presidency is fading, and a more moderate, pragmatic approach is ascendant 鈥 at least in some areas. Trump is eager to cut a deal with Democrats on health-care reform, as a prelude to what he sees as his most important initiative, tax reform.

Whether Trump can pull off either initiative is questionable, given the highly partisan atmosphere on Capitol Hill. For Trump supporters, the jury is still out. Polls show most Trump voters are sticking with him so far. And all the internal drama at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue matters less than whether Trump can fulfill his most important promises: to make their lives better and give Americans a better sense of security.

鈥淭he daily up and down won鈥檛 matter as much as, does the economy continue to improve, do they actually come up with some solutions on health care, are they able to resolve Syria and North Korea,鈥 says Thomas Schwartz, a political historian at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn. 鈥淭hose things will be much more important by the time you get to the midterms and the 2020 election.鈥

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Why Trump's palace intrigue matters
Read this article in
/USA/Politics/2017/0414/Why-Trump-s-palace-intrigue-matters
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe