Trump's lack of discipline leaves new chief of staff frustrated and dismayed
As the new White House
chief of staff, John F. Kelly routes all calls to and from President Trump
through the White House switchboard, where he can sign off on them. He stanches
the flow of information reaching the president’s desk. And he requires that all
staff members — including Trump’s relatives — go through him to reach the
president.
But none of those attempts at discipline mattered this week.
Instead, Kelly stood to the side as Trump upended his new chief of staff’s
carefully scripted plans — pinballing through an impromptu and combative news
conference in New York in which he inflamed another self-inflicted
controversy by comparing the actions of white supremacist groups at a deadly
rally in Charlottesville last weekend with the counterprotesters who came to
oppose them.
The uproar — which has consumed not only the White House but
the Republican Party — left Kelly deeply frustrated and dismayed just over two
weeks into his job, said people familiar with his thinking. The episode also
underscored the difficult challenges that even a four-star general faces in
instilling a sense of order around Trump, whose first instinct when cornered is
to lash out, even self-destructively.
By Wednesday, Trump, back at his New Jersey golf club, was
further isolated and the White House was again under attack. Some aides and
confidants privately described themselves as sickened and appalled, if not
entirely surprised, by Trump’s off-the-cuff comments. And the president
watched, furious, as a cascade of chief executives distanced themselves from
him, prompting the dissolution of his major business advisory councils.
Kelly allies say the former homeland security secretary came
into the West Wing job clear-eyed and practical, with the goal of implementing
discipline on the staff and processes of the White House, not controlling the
president.
“It’s clear Kelly is having a stabilizing and organizing
influence on the White House,” said former House speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.),
an informal Trump adviser. But, he added, “He will gradually have an
impact on Trump but it won’t be immediate. There are parts of Trump that are
almost impossible to manage.”
Another Republican operative and unofficial White House
adviser was more definitive, saying that no matter how respected or talented
Kelly may be, his first 2½ weeks on the job demonstrated an essential truth
about the Trump White House: The president will act as he so pleases, even
despite — and sometimes to spite — the efforts of his aides.
“The Kelly era was a bright, shining interlude between failed
attempts to right the Trump presidency and it has now come to a close after a
short but glorious run,” the operative said. “Like all people who work for
the president, he has since experienced the limits of the president’s promises
to cooperate in order to ensure the success of the enterprise.” This
portrait of the White House under Kelly comes from interviews with 17 West Wing
aides, informal advisers, Republican lawmakers and Trump confidants, many
speaking on the condition of anonymity to offer a more candid assessment.
During Kelly’s short tenure, Trump has startled the world
with his bellicose rhetoric on North Korea and attacked Senate Majority Leader
Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), further imperiling his stalled legislative agenda.
Nonetheless, Kelly has largely improved staff morale, and
implemented a rigor and order that has made West Wing aides feel both more
optimistic and less mistrustful of one another, several White House aides said.
He has been empowered to shake up the staff, if necessary,
although one confidant noted that all Kelly has done is restrict access to
Trump. The chief of staff is reviewing everyone’s portfolio, and this friend noted
that more West Wing consternation may occur when Kelly begins reallocating
assignments.
Longtime Trump campaign associates have been left out of the
loop and unable to build a rapport with Kelly. He has shown little interest in
courting them or in seeking out their advice about how to improve the
president’s standing. Phone calls go unreturned or handled in a friendly but
curt fashion by his top aide, Kirstjen Nielsen, who came over with Kelly from
the Homeland Security Department, they said.
On Wednesday, Hope Hicks, one of the president’s most loyal
and trusted advisers, was elevated to the role of interim communications director —
a role she has unofficially occupied for some time.
In the week before Trump departed for an August vacation in
Bedminister, N.J., the entire West Wing team began showing up at the 8 a.m.
senior staff meetings. Even Trump’s daughter Ivanka Trump — who rarely if ever
appeared at staff meetings led by Reince Priebus, the previous chief of staff —
began regularly attending.
Kelly has transformed the West Wing from a political Grand
Central Station — with aides and hangers-on cycling through the Oval Office —
into an actual place of business. One outside adviser recalls stopping by the
White House to say hello to his friends on days he had free time. Under Kelly,
he said, approvingly, “If you’re coming, now it’s, ‘Why are you coming?
Who are you coming to see? And why does the White House care about what you
have to say?’ ”
Aides usually work through Nielsen, and she funnels
information to Kelly, who decides what to show the president.
One key difference between Kelly and Priebus, two White House
officials said, is that aides respect Kelly and think his efforts to control
the information flow to Trump are about better serving the president — not
self-preservation.
Nonetheless, Trump has shown signs of chafing. Despite
Kelly’s switchboard requirement, the president has used his personal cellphone
to reach people. And one person close to Trump described him as a “caged
animal” under Kelly, saying he is always going to respond negatively to
attempts to corral him or keep him to a script.
The president was upset by the almost uniform backlash toward
his initial statement Saturday about the violent rally in Charlottesville, in
which he did not condemn the white supremacists and neo-Nazis by name, and
decried violence from both sides.
Although he did offer a broader scripted condemnation Monday,
he reverted Tuesday to what aides and confidants say are his more authentic
views, arguing that both sides were to blame for the violence.
Gary Cohn, Trump’s top economic adviser, who is Jewish,
appeared with Trump at Tuesday’s news conference, standing behind the president
in the lobby of Trump Tower in New York as he said that there were good people
who protested alongside the white supremacists and neo-Nazis who organized the
rally. Those close to Cohn described him as “disgusted”
and “frantically unhappy,” although he did not threaten to resign.
But Trump felt vindicated after the remarks, said people
familiar with his thinking. He believes that his base agrees with his assertion
that both sides are guilty of violence and that the nation risks sliding into a
cauldron of political correctness.
On Capitol Hill, Kelly’s evident lack of an ideological
compass has drawn mixed reactions from Republicans who have dealt with him,
said lawmakers and aides who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the
matter candidly.
Republican leaders appreciate Kelly’s light touch on strategy
and planning for a busy September. Instead of dictating terms, he is listening
to their mounting concerns about legislative expectations and assuring them
that he will be a partner.
“He’s not an Alexander Haig giving orders,” said Rep. Peter
T. King (R-N.Y.), referring to the late four-star Army general who served as
chief of staff under presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald R. Ford. “He’s been
very direct, to the point, making clear what the president’s position is. He’s
firm and tough, but not heavy-handed. He’s seen as a totally responsible
person.”
But some of Trump’s conservative allies said they wish Kelly
would do more to force the Republican establishment to rally behind the
president, and they worry that Kelly is following the model of Priebus by
showing too much deference to congressional Republican leaders.
Members of the conservative House Freedom Caucus have talked
about Kelly as a “black box” who is unreadable on policy, several people close
to the group said.
But within the West Wing, Kelly remains popular. Late last
week in Bedminster, he gathered at Trump’s clubhouse restaurant for a relaxed,
social dinner with the senior staff members. The group included Ivanka Trump,
son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner, White House press secretary Sarah
Huckabee Sanders, Hicks, Nielsen and others. The president also came by,
staying for the full meal.
As they reminisced about the campaign and told jokes, Kelly
offered a quip. “The best job I ever had was as a sergeant in the Marine
Corps,” he said with a laugh, “and after one week on this job, I believe the
best job I ever had is as a sergeant in the Marine Corps.”
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