Trump’s one- man stand
The President is becoming increasingly isolated over his comments following the violence in Charlottesville last weekend,
W ith prominent Republicans openly questioning his competence and moral leadership, President Donald Trump yesterday burrowed deeper into the racially charged debate over Confederate memorials and lashed out at members of his own party in the latest controversy to engulf his presidency.
Out of sight, but still online, Trump t weeted his defence of monuments to Confederate icons — bemoaning rising efforts to remove them as an attack on America’s “history and culture”. And he berated his critics who, with increasingly sharper language, have denounced his initially slow and then ultimately combative comments on the racial violence at a white supremacist rally last Sunday in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Trump was much quicker yesterday to condemn violence in Barcelona, where more than a dozen people were killed when a van veered onto a sidewalk and sped down a busy pedestrian zone in what authorities called a terror attack.
He then added to his expression of support a tweet reviving a debunked legend about a US general subduing Muslim rebels a century ago in the Philippines by shooting them with bullets dipped in pig blood.
“Study what General Pershing of the United States did to terrorists when caught. There was no more Radical Islamic Terror for 35 years!” Trump wrote.
Trump’s unpredictable, defiant and, critics claim, racially provocative behaviour has clearly begun to wear on his Republican allies.
Tennessee Senator Bob Corker, whom Trump considered for a Cabinet post, declared yesterday that “the president has not yet been able to demonstrate the stability nor some of the competence that he needs to” in dealing with crises. And Senator Dan Sullivan of Alaska tweeted, “Anything less than complete & unambiguous condemnation of white supremacists, neo- Nazis and the KKK by the @ POTUS i s unacceptable. Period.” Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina said Trump’s “moral authority is compromised”.
Trump, who i s known to try to change the focus of news coverage with an attention- grabbing declaration, sought yesterday to shift from the white supremacists to the future of statues.
“You can’t change history, but you can learn from it,” he t weeted. “Robert E. Lee. Stonewall Jackson — who’s next, Washington, Jefferson? So foolish. . . .
“Also the beauty that is being taken out of our cities, towns and parks will be greatly missed and never able to be comparably replaced!” He said in another tweet: “Sad to see the history and culture of our great country being ripped apart with the removal of our beautiful statues and monuments.”
Trump met separately yesterday at his golf club in nearby Bedminster with the administrator of the Small Business Administration and Florida Governor Rick Scott, a longtime Trump supporter. Trump also prepared for an unusual meeting today at the Camp David presidential retreat in Maryland with his national security team to discuss strategy for South Asia, including India, Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Vice- President Mike Pence cut short a long- planned Latin America tour to attend the meeting.
Though out of public view, Trump sought to make his voice heard on Twitter as he found himself increasingly under siege and alone while fanning the controversy over race and politics toward a full- fledged national conflagration.
He dissolved t wo business councils on Thursday after the CEO members began quitting, damaging his central campaign promise to be a business- savvy chief executive in the Oval Office. And the White House said yesterday that it was abandoning plans to form an infrastructure advisory council.
Two major charities, the Cleveland Clinic and the American Cancer Society, announced they are cancelling fundraisers scheduled for Trump’s resort in Palm Beach, Florida, amid the continuing backlash over Trump’s remarks.
Meanwhile, rumblings of discontent from his staff grew so loud that the White House had to release a statement saying that Trump’s chief economic adviser wasn’t quitting. And the President remained on the receiving end of bipartisan criticism for his handling of the aftermath of the Charlottesville clashes.
Yesterday, he hit back hard — against Republicans.
He accused “publicity- seeking” Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina of falsely stating Trump’s position on the demonstrators. He called Arizona Senator Jeff Flake “toxic” and praised Flake’s potential primary election opponent.
Graham said on Thursday that Trump “took a step backward by again suggesting there i s moral equivalency” between the marching white supremacists and the people who had been demonstrating against them. Flake has been increasingly critical of Trump in recent weeks.
Pressured by advisers, the President had softened his words on the dispute on Tuesday, t wo days after he had enraged many by declining to single out the white supremacists and neo- Nazis whose demonstration against the removal of a Robert E. Lee statute had led to violence and the death of a counterprotester in Charlottesville.
He returned to his combative stance on Wednesday — insisting anew during an unexpected and contentious news conference at Trump Tower that “both sides” were to blame.
Aides watching from the sidelines reacted with dismay and disbelief and privately told colleagues they were upset by the President’s remarks, though not upset enough for anyone to resign.
The resignation speculation around Gary Cohn, head of the National Economic Council and a Jew, had grown so intense by yesterday that the White House released a statement saying reports that Cohn was stepping down were “100 per cent false”.
But not all of Trump’s aides were unhappy with his performance.
Adviser Steve Bannon’s job security in the White House has become tenuous — Trump offered only a “we’ll see” on Wednesday when asked if his chief strategist would remain in his post — but Bannon has been telling allies that the President’s news conference would electrify the GOP base.
And in a pair of interviews on Thursday, Bannon cheered on the President’s nationalist tendencies and suggested that a fight over Confederate monuments was a political fight he welcomes.
“The race- identity politics of the left wants to say it’s all racist,” Bannon told the New York Times. “Just give me more. Tear down more statues. Say the revolution is coming. I can’t get enough of it.”