The Citizen (Gauteng)

Ex-Trump aide quits agency

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New York – US President Donald Trump’s former White House strategist Steve Bannon has stepped down from Breitbart News, the conservati­ve news outlet announced, still roiled in controvers­y over incendiary remarks about the president quoted in a new book.

The announceme­nt comes just days after the 64-year-old news executive at the provocativ­e right-wing site publicly split with Trump over explosive comments he made about the president’s fitness for office and members of his family.

Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House – which paints the president as disengaged, ill-informed and unstable – has seen Bannon abandoned by financial patrons, condemned by erstwhile allies and ridiculed by Trump himself.

His departure from Breitbart threatens to further isolate the self-proclaimed champion of anti-Washington populism that swept Trump to power and whom Bloomberg once called “the most dangerous political operative in America”.

“Steve is a valued part of our legacy, and we will always be grateful for his contributi­ons, and what he has helped us to accomplish,” Breitbart CEO Larry Solov said in a statement.

Bannon said he was “proud of what the Breitbart team has accomplish­ed in so short a period of time in building out a world-class news platform”.

The New York Times said Bannon’s departure was forced by onetime financial patron, Rebekah Mercer.

Breitbart said Bannon and the company will “work together on a smooth and orderly transition”, but provided no other immediate details.

Bannon emerged from relative obscurity when Trump picked him as campaign chief in August 2016, just three months out from the presidenti­al election that he was then widely expected to lose against Democrat Hillary Clinton.

He was running Breitbart at the time, a website providing boisterous coverage of the Republican tycoon’s rise, where he had served as executive chairman since 2012.

He quickly presided over the brand of economic populism promoted by Trump and was hired as chief strategist for the White House.

For months, Trump allowed Bannon to conduct open war from inside the White House against establishe­d party leaders, incumbent lawmakers and other heavyweigh­ts.

After Bannon left the White House in August, he remained on good terms with Trump.

But if he was damaged by the electoral defeat of his preferred candidate, Roy Moore, in Alabama, his fall from grace was cemented by Fire and Fury.

In the book, Bannon is quoted as saying a pre-election meeting involving Trump’s eldest son Donald Jnr and a Kremlin-linked Russian lawyer was “treasonous”.

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