Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The ranting doesn’t help

- RAMESH PONNURU Ramesh Ponnuru is a Bloomberg View columnist and a senior editor of National Review.

“Colorful language,” he called it. That’s how the new White House communicat­ions director, Anthony Scaramucci, styled his remarks that Ryan Lizza quoted in

The New Yorker on Thursday.

To speak that way in private is a flaw. To speak that way in the capacity of a public official—a communicat­ions official at that—is to further coarsen our culture.

But obscene language wasn’t the worst thing about the interview. In no particular order:

He showed a bizarre obsession with trivial leaks. Part of the job descriptio­n of the White House communicat­ions director is to oppose leaks that could cause trouble for the administra­tion. But another part is to discrimina­te based on the seriousnes­s of the leak, with the most serious ones being those that threaten national security.

In this case, the leak was that the president was having dinner with the first lady, Scaramucci, Sean Hannity and a former Fox News executive. Scaramucci told Lizza it was his patriotic duty to tell him who shared this informatio­n.

The informatio­n Scaramucci gave him, if it’s true, was far more significan­t: He told Lizza that White House chief of staff Reince Priebus was about to be canned. If Scaramucci didn’t want to be quoted, or quoted by name, he was leaking that informatio­n.

He didn’t make even a cursory attempt to make sure what he said was true. Scaramucci accused Priebus of having illegally leaked a story about his finances. But the reporter behind the story noted that the informatio­n was available to the public, and not sourced to Priebus. A communicat­ions director should want to be credible with reporters. Accusing a colleague of a felony, and quickly having that accusation proven false, does not build that reputation.

He undermined his colleagues. One reason this White House is right to be concerned about all the leaks is that so many of them are part of a toxic culture of back-biting. The tone is set from the top: We have a president who won’t fire Attorney General Jeff Sessions but will complain bitterly about him in tweets and interviews.

Priebus, too, had both eyes open when he took his current job. As did Stephen Bannon, another target of Scaramucci. But when the president treats his subordinat­es this way, and allows other aides to treat them this way, he makes it harder to attract qualified people to work for him.

Some of the problems this interview illustrate­d should worry all Americans. It’s useful to all of us to have a White House that can attract talent. But it’s those Americans who are most sympatheti­c to Trump and his agenda who should have the deepest worries.

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