The Telegram (St. John's)

‘We’ll See’

Trump’s catchphras­e for any circumstan­ce is getting a workout

- BY CATHERINE LUCEY AND KEN THOMAS

When in doubt, President Donald Trump has a readymade response to any questions: “We’ll see.”

On Wednesday, Trump delivered his go-to line repeatedly. Asked if he would tie debt ceiling legislatio­n to Harvey relief: “We’ll see.” On his plans for an increasing­ly aggressive North Korea: “We’ll see.” And on efforts to work with the Chinese president: “We’ll see how that works out.”

Trump relies heavily on “we’ll see” in the White House, when parrying questions about national security, policy deliberati­ons and personnel. For the onetime real estate tycoon and businessma­n who often campaigned as a master deal-maker, the vague phrase is a multitaski­ng placeholde­r that helps him stall for time, keep his options open and build suspense.

“It goes to the overall negotiatin­g strategy of being unpredicta­ble and noncommitt­al. Everyone stays guessing,” said Sam Nunberg, a former campaign aide. “He’s always used that.”

During a news conference Thursday, Trump offered up the phrase as he spoke about efforts to pursue a peace deal between Israelis and Palestinia­ns. “We have a great group of people. We’ll see what happens,” he said.

Trump has deployed the line throughout the year, as the administra­tion sought to push back against North Korea’s developmen­t of its nuclear and missile program, as he weighed exiting the Paris climate deal and as he spoke about efforts to renegotiat­e NAFTA.

A well placed “we’ll see” also proved a helpful way for Trump to put an aide on ice during a year that has been replete with staff shake-ups. During a contentiou­s mid-august news conference in Trump Tower, the president was asked if he still had confidence in Steve Bannon, then a senior strategist. “He’s a good person. He actually gets very unfair press in that regard. But we’ll see what happens with Mr. Bannon,” Trump said. Three days later, Bannon was out.

At times, “we’ll see” can prompt anxiety. On Sunday, Trump exited an Episcopali­an church near the White House and was asked by reporters if he would attack North Korea. “We’ll see,” he said, prompting a flurry of questions internatio­nally about U.S. plans for the Korean peninsula.

Trump has used the expression to build suspense, as he did in February when deciding who should replace fired national security adviser Michael Flynn. Trump said: “I’ve been thinking about someone for the last three or four days, we’ll see what happens.” The president ultimately chose H.R. Mcmaster.

At other moments, it may simply have helped him stall. Back in January, in advance of his first conversati­on with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Trump was noncommitt­al about whether he was considerin­g lifting economic penalties, telling reporters. “We’ll see what happens.” The sanctions remain in place, for now.

Michael D’antonio, a Trump biographer, said the expression provides a way for the president to inject an element of suspense even when he might not have a decisive option at the time.

“Saying ‘we’ll see’ is almost a way of suggesting that there’s something in the offing, he knows what it is and all will be revealed in time,” D’antonio said.

Michael Caputo, a former adviser to Trump’s campaign, said the use of the phrase may also be an indicator that the president has decided to be more cagey in his dealings with Republican­s. He noted Trump’s use of the line several times on Wednesday, the same day he reached agreement with congressio­nal Democrats to keep the government running and raise the nation’s debt limit.

“Why would the president show the Republican leadership of the House his cards? They’ve been playing their cards against him for months. This ‘we’ll see’ is a sign that the Republican­s better get their house in order,” Caputo said.

Of course, Trump has been throwing about “we’ll see” since long before he entered the White House.

During the campaign, he used it to express skepticism about how he would be treated at the first presidenti­al debate. Speaking on “Fox and Friends,” he said the debates are “a very unfair system, so we’ll see what happens.”

In 2004, Trump — then starring on the reality show “The Apprentice” — said television networks wanted to film his wedding to the former Melania Knauss, now the first lady. Trump said two networks wanted to hear him say, “I do,” instead of “You’re fired!”

“Everybody wants that to happen except for me and Melania,” said Trump. “We’ll see.”

In the end, the lavish wedding at Trump’s Florida estate, Mara-lago, was not televised.

“It goes to the overall negotiatin­g strategy of being unpredicta­ble and noncommitt­al. Everyone stays guessing. He’s always used that.”

Sam Nunberg, a former Trump campaign aide

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference in Washington Thursday.
AP PHOTO U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference in Washington Thursday.

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