Medicine Hat News

New book leaves Trump ‘furious,’ ‘disgusted’ with Steve Bannon

- JILL COLVIN AND JONATHAN LEMIRE

WASHINGTON President Donald Trump launched a scathing attack on former top adviser Steve Bannon, responding to a new book that portrays Trump as an undiscipli­ned man-child who didn’t actually want to win the White House and quotes Bannon as calling his son’s contact with a Russian lawyer “treasonous.”

Hitting back via a formal White House statement rather than a more typical Twitter volley, Trump insisted Bannon had little to do with his victorious campaign and “has nothing to do with me or my Presidency.”

“When he was fired, he not only lost his job, he lost his mind,” Trump said Wednesday.

It was a blistering attack against the man who helped deliver the presidency to Trump, spurred by an unflatteri­ng new book by writer Michael Wolff that paints Trump as a leader who doesn’t understand the weight of the presidency and spends his evenings eating cheeseburg­ers in bed, watching television and talking on the phone to old friends.

Late Wednesday, Trump attorney Charles Harder threatened legal action against Bannon over “disparagin­g statements and in some cases outright defamatory statements.”

Harder sent Bannon a letter saying the former Trump aide violated confidenti­ality agreements by speaking with Wolff. The letter demanded Bannon “cease and desist” any further disclosure of confidenti­al informatio­n.

Harder on Thursday threatened legal action against Wolff and publisher Henry Holt and Co. in an attempt to halt the book’s publicatio­n or release of further excerpts. Neither immediatel­y responded to requests for comment.

Trump has a history of threatenin­g to sue when he doesn’t like something but rarely acts on those threats.

White House aides were blindsided when early excerpts from “Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House” were published online by New York magazine and other media outlets ahead of the Jan. 9 publicatio­n date.

The release left Trump “furious” and “disgusted,” said White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who complained that the book contained “outrageous” and “completely false claims against the president, his administra­tion and his family.”

Asked what specifical­ly had prompted the president’s fury with Bannon, she said: “I would certainly think that going after the president’s son in an absolutely outrageous and unpreceden­ted way is probably not the best way to curry favour with anybody.”

In the book, an advance copy of which was provided to The Associated Press, Bannon is quoted as describing a June 2016 meeting at Trump Tower between Donald Trump Jr., Trump campaign aides and a Russian lawyer as “treasonous” and “unpatrioti­c.” The meeting has become a focus of federal and congressio­nal investigat­ors.

Bannon also told Wolff the investigat­ions into potential collusion between Russia and Trump campaign officials would likely focus on money laundering.

“They’re going to crack Don Junior like an egg on national TV,” Bannon was quoted as saying in one section that was first reported by The Guardian.

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