Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Stay or go?

After Trump-fuelled riot, aides debate early exit

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WASHINGTON, DC, United States (AP) — A steady stream of Trump Administra­tion officials are beating an early path to the exits as a protest against the deadly siege of the US Capitol this week even as others wrestling with the stay-or-go question conclude that they owe it to the public to see things through to the end.

Some of Trump’s critics don’t give those in the early-exit caucus much credit for walking away from their jobs with less than two weeks left in the Administra­tion, seeing it as little more than a face-saving effort.

“Nobody is fooled by these last-second, come-to-jesus conversion­s,” said Rick Wilson, co-founder of the Lincoln Project, a group of Republican­s fiercely critical of Trump.

Trump’s education and transporta­tion secretarie­s, his acting chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers and deputy national security adviser are among at least a dozen senior administra­tion officials who have announced their resignatio­ns since Wednesday’s attack by Trump supporters on the Capitol.

Serving under Trump has been a test for many aides who have abided some of the president’s most provocativ­e actions, including his embrace of authoritar­ians, a habit of coarsely belittling political adversarie­s and the ease and frequency with which he’s deployed falsehoods for personal benefit.

But Trump’s behaviour in a few harrowing hours on Wednesday – first by egging on his supporters to demand Congress subvert the election and later declining to condemn the day’s violence – was a line too far for several high-profile officials serving the president.

It wasn’t until Thursday evening, more than 24 hours after the Capitol siege, that Trump in a video message condemned the actions of the rioters as “heinous” and acknowledg­ed his election loss.

Several White House and agency officials still on the job Thursday said they were deeply conflicted about whether to resign, fearing what would transpire if Trump was left surrounded in his final days on the job only by those who encouraged his worse instincts. In at least one case, a person on the Biden transition requested that individual­s remain on the job to help smooth the handoff.

The decisions on whether to stay or go are playing out at a moment when aides already have moving boxes at the ready and an eye on the door despite Trump’s insistence over the last two months that the election results would be overturned and he’d serve a second term. Trump only acknowledg­ed in a statement on Thursday that his presidency will end January 20.

Education Secretary Betsy Devos and Transporta­tion Secretary Elaine Chao on Thursday became the highest-ranking Administra­tion officials to resign over the pro-trump insurrecti­on. In a statement, Chao, who is married to Senate GOP leader Mitch Mcconnell, said the violent attack on the Capitol “has deeply troubled me in a way that I simply cannot set aside”.

Devos, in her resignatio­n letter, cast blame on the president for inciting the mob. “There is no mistaking the impact your rhetoric had on the situation, and it is the inflection point for me,” she wrote.

Mick Mulvaney, the US special envoy to Northern Ireland and a former White House chief of staff, said there was a lot of “soul searching” going on at the White House as he announced his own resignatio­n from the Administra­tion.

“A lot of folks are wondering if I do resign today, who’s going to take my place and will it make it better or will it make it worse,” Mulvaney said in a CNBC interview.

Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle said they hoped Trump would be surrounded by capable advisers in the final days of his time in office.

Senator Joe Manchin, a West Virginia Democrat, on Thursday urged “the good men and women honourably serving at all levels of the federal government to please stay at their post for the protection of our democracy”.

“The actions of a rogue president will not and should not reflect on you,” Manchin said. “Instead, your patriotism and commitment to the greater good of our country will be reaffirmed.”

Republican Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, pleaded for those in the national security apparatus to stay in their positions. “We need you now more than ever,” Graham said. He added, “To those who believe you should leave your post now to make a statement, I would urge you not.”

The two top Democrats in Congress, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, had a different strategy in mind. They said they would move forward with an impeachmen­t effort if Vicepresid­ent Mike Pence and the Cabinet failed to invoke the 25th Amendment to try to oust Trump from office early.

Neither impeachmen­t nor ouster under the 25th Amendment was considered probable with less than two weeks left in Trump’s presidency.

One Cabinet official, Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf, made clear he was digging in until the end “to ensure the Administra­tion’s focus remains on the serious threats facing our country and an orderly transition to President-elect Biden’s DHS team”.

Yet many White House aides, both senior officials and lower-level staff, were struggling with whether or when to exit, according to two people familiar with internal deliberati­ons at the White House. They spoke on condition anonymity to discuss private conversati­ons.

One of the individual­s said many who have already left or are still considerin­g leaving are aware that their actions will be seen as a cynical attempt to separate themselves from Trump as they eye their own futures. The other, a senior administra­tion official who has decided to stay on, said people have had thoughts about leaving, but felt a responsibi­lity to keep working to ensure a smooth transition.

The Lincoln Project’s Wilson said a last-minute denunciati­on of Trump won’t help departing officials lose the taint of their connection to this presidency.

“They’re all going to have their historic revisionis­m, they’re all going to have their own imaginary heroism,” Wilson said. “But America is going to know who these people are.”

 ?? (Photo: AP) ?? Trump supporters try to break through a police barrier, Wednesday at the Capitol in Washington, DC. As Congress prepares to affirm President-elect Joe Biden’s victory, thousands of people had gathered to show their support for President Donald Trump and his claims of election fraud.
(Photo: AP) Trump supporters try to break through a police barrier, Wednesday at the Capitol in Washington, DC. As Congress prepares to affirm President-elect Joe Biden’s victory, thousands of people had gathered to show their support for President Donald Trump and his claims of election fraud.

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