Those Calls to Trump? White House Admits They Didn't Happen
Has President Trump told you about the time the head of
the Boy Scouts called to say his
was the best speech ever delivered to the more than century-old organization?
What about when the president of Mexico picked up the telephone to let him know
that his tough enforcement efforts at the border were paying off handsomely?
The anecdotes, both of which Mr. Trump told over the last
week, were similar in that they appeared to be efforts to showcase broad
support for the president when his White House has been mired in turmoil. But
they also had another thing in common, the White House conceded on Wednesday:
Neither was true.
Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary,
confirmed at her daily briefing what the Boy Scouts and the Mexican government
had already asserted publicly, which is that neither phone call that Mr. Trump
referred to had occurred.
The stories were not fabrications, Ms. Sanders insisted.
“Multiple members of the Boy Scouts leadership” had praised Mr. Trump’s speech
in Glen Jean, W.Va., after he finished last week, she said. And Mr. Trump and
President Enrique Peña Nieto of
Mexico had discussed border enforcement last month on the sideline of the Group
of 20 summit meeting in Hamburg, Germany, she added. “I wouldn’t say it was a
lie — that’s a pretty bold accusation,” Ms. Sanders said. “The conversations
took place, they just simply didn’t take place over a phone call, they happened
in person.”
The nonexistent phone calls added to questions about Mr.
Trump’s credibility and that of his White House, already in doubt given
shifting explanations on matters large and small, including the size of the
crowd at Mr. Trump’s inauguration and his involvement in drafting a statement
about why his son Donald J. Trump Jr. had
met with a Kremlin-connected lawyer during the campaign. The calls appeared to
be the latest evidence that the president, who prefers impromptu storytelling
to a fact-checked script, is willing to shade or even manufacture events to
suit his preferred narrative — even when the story is easily disprovable and of
little consequence.
“He’s been lying his whole life, almost reflexively, and
it’s almost as if he finds it more satisfying and easier than to speak with
precision,” said Michael D’Antonio, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter who later
wrote a biography of Mr. Trump, “The Truth About Trump.” “When he was a kid, he
lied about whether he hit a home run or not, and when he was a young man, he
lied about how tall Trump Tower is — how many floors it is and the actual
floors in feet — and he lied about which beautiful women were interested in
him.” Mr. Trump has written about how he bends the truth when it
suits his purposes, asserting in his 1987 book “The Art of the Deal” that “a
little hyperbole never hurts.” People want to believe that something is the biggest and the
greatest and the most spectacular,” Mr. Trump wrote then. “I call it truthful
hyperbole. It’s an innocent form of exaggeration — and a very effective form of
promotion.”
The major difference now, Mr. D’Antonio said, is that as
president Mr. Trump is fact-checked assiduously.
Mr. Trump’s latest tangle with the truth began on Monday,
when he said at a cabinet meeting that Mr. Peña Nieto had been on the phone to
him. “Even the president of Mexico called me,” Mr. Trump said, touting his
success in cracking down on illegal immigration. “They said their southern
border — very few people are coming because they know they’re not going to get
through our border, which is the ultimate compliment.”
The Mexican government said on Wednesday that no such
telephone call took place. In a statement, Mexico’s secretary of foreign
relations said Mr. Peña Nieto told Mr. Trump during the Group of 20 summit
meeting that deportations of Mexicans from the United States had fallen 31
percent over the first six months of the year, compared with the same period in
2016. On Tuesday, it was the Boy Scouts’ turn: A leaked transcript
of an interview the president had with The Wall Street Journal quoted him
saying that the head of the Boy Scouts had called him full of praise for a
highly political speech Mr. Trump had delivered at the National Scout Jamboree.
“I got a call from the head of the Boy Scouts saying it was
the greatest speech that was ever made to them, and they were very thankful,”
Mr. Trump told The Journal. On Wednesday, the Boy Scouts of America said it was
not aware of any call from its leadership to Mr. Trump. In a statement, the
organization said that an earlier statement from Michael Surbaugh, the
organization’s chief, apologizing to scouts for Mr. Trump’s speech, “speaks for
itself.” Mr. Surbaugh had expressed regret to those who were “offended by the
political rhetoric that was inserted into the jamboree.’’
It is hardly unprecedented for a president to use a story to
inspire or motivate, or to embellish a yarn for the sake of punctuating a
poignant message. President Lyndon B. Johnson was a frequent and animated
storyteller, and Ronald Reagan was so partial to a heart-tugging anecdote that
his tales sometimes aroused suspicion that they had come from a movie in which
he had starred rather than real life.
For his first inaugural address — the first to be delivered
from the West side of the Capitol facing Arlington National Cemetery — Mr.
Reagan wanted to recount the story of a World War I soldier, buried in
Arlington, who had written in his journal about his pledge to give everything
for his country and died in battle the next day. The only trouble, his
speechwriter told him, was that the fallen soldier was buried in his hometown,
not at Arlington, according to H. W. Brands, a historian at the University of
Texas and biographer of Mr. Reagan.
But the president, enamored of the story, left it in his
speech, and said the soldier was buried “under one such marker,” leaving his
actual resting place vague. The White House later conceded that the man in
question was not under a marker at Arlington.
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