The Prince George Citizen

Fire and Fury book release blows open GOP feud

- Zeke MILLER, Steve PEOPLES

WASHINGTON — The acrimony surroundin­g former White House adviser Steve Bannon’s very public break with President Donald Trump is escalating, suggesting a permanent split between the president and the pugilistic strategist who helped put him in the Oval Office.

The new fissure in an already fractious Republican Party cast doubt on Bannon’s hopes to foment a movement centred on “Trumpism without Trump.”

It already has cost him a key backer. Rebekah Mercer, the billionair­e GOP donor and Breitbart co-owner, issued a statement Thursday distancing her family from Bannon.

“I support President Trump and the platform upon which he was elected,” she said. “My family and I have not communicat­ed with Steve Bannon in many months and have provided no financial support to his political agenda, nor do we support his recent actions and statements.”

Trump hailed that move on Twitter Friday, saying: “The Mercer Family recently dumped the leaker known as Sloppy Steve Bannon. Smart!”

White House officials described the president as furious at Bannon’s criticisms, laid out in an explosive new book that quoted the former aide as questionin­g Trump’s competence and describing a June 2016 meeting at Trump Tower between Donald Trump Jr., Trump campaign aides and a Russian lawyer as “treasonous” and “unpatrioti­c.”

On Twitter Thursday night, Trump said the book was full of “lies, misreprese­ntations and sources that don’t exist.” He also came up with a new nickname for Bannon: “Sloppy Steve.”

A parade of administra­tion officials and allies worked to discredit Bannon as a disgruntle­d has-been. White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders went so far as to suggest that Bannon ought to be booted from Breitbart, the populist website he helps run.

“I certainly think that it’s something they should look at and consider,” she said.

Michael Wolff, author of “Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House,” spoke on NBC’s “Today Show” Friday, defending his reporting and saying the president’s efforts to halt publicatio­n have been good for sales.

Asked about Bannon’s comments in the book and in recent days, Wolff said: “The president has tried to put this, this book is about Steve Bannon. So let me say very forthright­ly: This book is not about Steve Bannon. This book is about Donald Trump.”

Bannon had helped Trump form a coalition of anti-establishm­ent Republican­s, blue-collar working class and economic nationalis­ts that launched him to the White House, but Trump had long ago grown frustrated that Bannon seemed to be oversteppi­ng his role as a staffer.

The self-appointed keeper of Trump’s nationalis­t flame during the president’s first six months in office, Bannon had soured on the president even before he was pushed out of the White House for feeding the perception that he was Trump’s puppeteer.

None of Bannon’s close associates was willing to speak publicly about the fallout but privately conceded that the explosive comments may forever tarnish his brand. Bannon’s political appeal had been deeply tied to the perception that he was an ally of Trump’s. Those close to Bannon feared that the connection had been permanentl­y severed.

Bannon was preparing to launch a non-profit organizati­on designed to help give Trump’s brand of conservati­sm populism a permanent base. It’s unclear how Bannon’s new rift with the president, and the related impact on major donors, will affect the organizati­on, dubbed Citizens of the American Republic.

Current and former White House officials, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal conversati­ons, said Bannon had miscalcula­ted by attacking the president and his family. Much of Bannon’s political clout, they argue, stemmed from the assumption that he was acting with the imprimatur of the president, even if Trump wasn’t visibly in lockstep.

Some Trump allies also expressed satisfacti­on that Bannon appeared to be finally cast out of the president’s inner circle.

“Bannon has no contingent,” former Republican House Speaker Newt Gingrich said Wednesday between media interviews to defend Trump. On Thursday, Gingrich echoed Trump’s charge that Bannon had “lost his mind.”

Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a longtime punching bag for Bannon, reveled in the aide’s break with the president. “I’d like to associate myself with what the president had to say about Steve Bannon yesterday,” he said mischievou­sly Thursday.

Since leaving the White House, Bannon spent much of his time courting donors to help finance his self-declared war on the Republican establishm­ent. He vowed to find Republican challenger­s for virtually every GOP senator seeking election this fall, chiefly for the purpose of electing candidates who would remove McConnell as majority leader.

Bannon publicly backed conservati­ve challenger­s in Arizona, Nevada, Wisconsin, Mississipp­i and New York, where House challenger Michael Grimm issued a statement denouncing the ex-adviser’s comments as “baseless attacks” that were “beyond disturbing.”

Trump hailed that move on Twitter Friday, saying: “The Mercer Family recently dumped the leaker known as Sloppy Steve Bannon. Smart!”

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? U.S. President Donald Trump walks on the South Lawn as he leaves the White House on Friday for Camp David, Md., to participat­e in a congressio­nal Republican leadership retreat.
AP PHOTO U.S. President Donald Trump walks on the South Lawn as he leaves the White House on Friday for Camp David, Md., to participat­e in a congressio­nal Republican leadership retreat.

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