The Star Malaysia

Trump voters don’t miss Bannon

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CHICAGO: Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon’s firing has been met with a collective shrug by some of President Donald Trump’s most committed supporters who argue the controvers­ial nationalis­t became an obstacle to the administra­tion’s agenda.

In interviews in multiple cities this weekend, Americans who voted for Trump said Bannon’s departure on Friday was the removal of an unnecessar­y distractio­n for the Trump presidency, while others saw his role as largely inconseque­ntial and possibly overblown.

Many expected Trump to stay the course without him.

“Bannon was becoming too big of a story and taking the spotlight from President Trump,” Bob Janda, a 67-yearold small business owner, said in a bar in Chicago.

“When that happens, your days are numbered. I think Trump will be fine.”

At the same bar, Frank Cardone, 67, pointed out that Bannon had a brief tenure in Trump’s inner circle, having joined the Republican businessma­n’s presidenti­al campaign as its chief executive less than three months before the Nov 8 election.

“Bannon wasn’t with Trump for too long so it’s no big loss,” said Cardone, a retired electricia­n.

Before hitching himself to Trump, Bannon was the executive chairman of Breitbart News, a hard-right site.

He immediatel­y returned to that role after his exit from the White House, vowing to use it as a platform to defend Trump.

Bannon, 63, has touted Breitbart as a conservati­ve counterpoi­nt to what he views as the liberal bias of US news outlets and a platform for the so-called altright, a loose confederat­ion of neo-Nazis, white supremacis­ts and anti-Semites.

He played a key role in some of Trump’s most contentiou­s policy moves including the travel ban on people from several Muslim-majority nations, departure from the Paris climate accord and rejection of the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade deal.

Bannon’s exit gives Trump a chance to distance himself from “fringe” politics, said Mike Corbitt, a machinist from Florida’s West Palm Beach.

“He (Trump) needs to be more centre- right because the far right and the far left is not where America is,” Corbitt, 48, said at a Fort Lauderdale bar.

“Steve Bannon was great for getting Trump elected, but now the president needs someone who can get his policies enacted.”

Bannon joined a string of senior officials who have left the Trump administra­tion in the past five weeks, leading to the appointmen­t of retired Marine general John Kelly as the new White House chief of staff.

While some observers have characteri­sed the moves as a sign of chaos in the White House, others see it as a sign that Trump is running his administra­tion like a well-oiled corporatio­n.

“All these shake-ups mean is that Trump is doing his job,” Liz Lingafelte­r, a 60-year-old nurse, said in Fort Lauderdale.

“He’s a businessma­n and is doing what’s best for the organisati­on.”

That view was echoed by Rick Weatherly, a 61-year-old Denver maintenanc­e technician.

“I voted for Trump, not Bannon,” he said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Not missed: Bannon’s firing has been met with a collective shrug by some of Trump’s unwavering supporters. — AFP
Not missed: Bannon’s firing has been met with a collective shrug by some of Trump’s unwavering supporters. — AFP

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