The Niagara Falls Review

Scaramucci lobs grenades in already chaotic White House

- JULIE BYKOWICZ and VIVIAN SALAMA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — New White House communicat­ions director Anthony Sc ar amuc ci went after chief of staff Reince Priebus on Thursday as a suspected “leaker” inside the West Wing in a pull-no-punches interview that laid bare the personalit­y clashes and internal turmoil of Donald Trump’s presidency.

“The fish stinks from the head down,” Scaramucci said after calling in to CNN for an interview that he said was authorized by Trump, the only person to whom Scaramucci reports. A say-anything New Yorker like his boss, Scaramucci challenged Priebus to come forward and say publicly that he’s not a leaker.

In the clearest sign yet that the president and his new communicat­ions director are cut from the same cloth, Scaramucci has spent the past 24 hours publicly complainin­g about the “leak” of a public document, speculatin­g on Twitter and calling in to television shows. He’s shown no hesitation to enlist what he describes as his “buddies” at the FBI to investigat­e anyone he believes is damaging the White House.

And he’s openly aired difference­s between himself and Priebus, comparing their relationsh­ip to that of brothers who are “rough on each other” and invoking Cain and Abel. One of those biblical brothers murdered the other.

“I don’t know if this is repairable or not — that will be up to the president,” Scaramucci said of his difference­s with Priebus.

It all appears to signal what could be a new and even less stable phase in Trump’s young presidency, with considerab­le energy devoted to palace intrigue and internal power struggles. And it comes as Republican­s on Capitol Hill are having trouble advancing the president’s agenda and as investigat­ors probe allegation­s of ties between the Trump campaign and Russian interferen­ce in the election last fall.

Scaramucci has been on the job less than a week, having been hired by the president against the wishes of Priebus and other senior officials, including adviser Steve Bannon.

His arrival marked the first in a series of falling dominoes that seemed to be leading toward Priebus, the chief of staff who as of Wednesday insisted he isn’t going anywhere.

Press secretary Sean Spicer, a close ally of Priebus, resigned last week.

Scaramucci then forced out another communicat­ions aide close with Priebus. Then came Wednesday night. Scaramucci tweeted that someone had illegally leaked financial informatio­n about him, conspicuou­sly mentioning Priebus’s Twitter handle. Scaramucci later deleted that tweet and said he had only mentioned Priebus to show that all senior leaders are taking the leak crackdown seriously.

“In light of the leak of my financial disclosure info which is a felony, I will be contacting @FBI and the @ JusticeDep­t #swamp @Reince45,” his since-deleted tweet read.

Scaramucci’s financial disclosure form wasn’t leaked at all. It was released after a public records request by a Politico reporter to the Export-Import Bank, where Scaramucci had been employed at a senior level since mid-June.

The Associated Press subsequent­ly obtained the same financial disclosure Thursday. A reporter filled out a publicly available form, turned it in at the bank’s office and was emailed a copy of Scaramucci’s financial disclosure about 30 minutes later.

In the CNN interview, Scaramucci said he’d be reaching out to his “buddies” in the FBI about the matter.

If Scaramucci tries to direct the FBI to conduct a leak investigat­ion, especially when there was no illegal disclosure to begin with, that could brush up against the Justice Department’s obligation to function independen­tly from the White House, said Mark Zaid, a national security lawyer in Washington.

“It starts to potentiall­y smell and approach an inappropri­ate line,” Zaid said.

As CNN was discussing the financial disclosure episode, Scaramucci called in — ripping a page from Trump’s own playbook.

In his free-wheeling diatribe, he sidesteppe­d the point that his financial documents were a matter of public record, saying he believes there are efforts to “undermine me with the president and my teammates.” He insisted, “they’re releasing all this informatio­n trying to hit me, to eject me,”

“I can tell you two fish that don’t stink, and that’s me and the president,” Scaramucci declared after implying the chief of staff was among those who leak harmful informatio­n to the media. “I don’t like the activity going on in the White House. I don’t like what they’re doing to my friend.”

Later in the interview, Scaramucci addressed Priebus in even clearer terms.

“If Reince wants to explain that he’s not a leaker, let him do that,” Scaramucci said. “He’s going to need to speak for his own actions.”

Kellyanne Conway, another senior White House adviser, said in a Fox News interview: “Somebody is trying to get in his way and scare him off from working here, which is a huge mistake.”

Trump has praised Scaramucci’s combativen­ess and loyalty, which the president has contrasted with attorney general Jeff Sessions’ perceived betrayal. That’s according to three White House officials and people close to the president not authorized to speak publicly about private conversati­ons.

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