White House defends Kelly’s Trump defense
General shouldn’t be challenged by press, Sanders says.
The White WASHINGTON — House is defending President Donald Trump’s chief of staff after the aide mischaracterized remarks of a Democratic congresswoman who has assailed Trump’s condolence call to the widow of a soldier killed in Niger.
John Kelly on Thursday derided Rep. Frederica Wilson of Florida on Thursday as an “empty barrel,” saying she had delivered a speech at an FBI field office dedication in which she “talked about how she was instrumental in getting the funding for that building.”
Video of the speech obtained by South Florida’s Sun-Sentinel shows Wilson never mentioned the building’s funding but did recount her efforts to name the building after two special agents who had been killed.
Press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said: “If you’re able to make a sacred act like honoring American heroes about yourself, you’re an empty barrel.” She also used a dismissive Southwest rancher’s term, calling Wilson, who often wears elaborate hats, “all hat and no cattle.”
Sanders also suggested that reporters should let the matter drop and should not be challenging Kelly, a retired Marine general.
“If you want to go after General Kelly, if you want to go after a four-star Marine general, that’s highly inappropriate,” she said.
The fight over Trump’s displays of compassion for America’s war dead sped ahead Friday, a day after Kelly made an emotional call for an end to politicizing the “sacred” matter of how a nation consoles the families of slain soldiers. Trump himself had called Wilson “wacky” in a latenight tweet.
Kelly, whose son was killed while serving in Afghanistan, criticized Wilson during a dramatic White House appearance Thursday. Wilson suggested that it was the White House, and not her, that was adding to a grieving family’s anguish.
“You know, I feel sorry for General Kelly,” she told CNN. “He has my sympathy for the loss of his son. But he can’t just go on TV and lie on me.”
Trump, who told associates he was furious about what he perceived as unfair media coverage of the current phone-call controversy, posted on Twitter late Thursday, adding fuel to the political fire he ignited with his comments on the way his predecessors comforted the next of kin.
“The Fake News is going crazy with wacky Congresswoman Wilson (D), who was SECRETLY on a very personal call, and gave a total lie on content!” the president wrote.
Kelly, who has rarely discussed the 2010 death of his son in public, was taken by surprise when Trump hinted in an interview earlier in the week that President Barack Obama never called to offer Kelly condolences, according to two White House officials not authorized to discuss private conversations.
But that was soon eclipsed by the outrage Kelly expressed over what he believed was Wilson trying to score political points off a tragedy, the officials said.
The scene underscored Kelly’s singular role as an authoritative adviser and now spokesman for a president prone to false claims, exaggerations and misstatements. Kelly, who joined the White House to restore internal order, has increasingly become a public figure himself, employed to project calm in times of crisis.