Baltimore Sun

Trump allies fret over staff vacancies

Insiders: Fears rise ahead of midterms, Mueller investigat­ion

- By Zeke Miller, Jill Colvin and Jonathan Lemire

WASHINGTON — Increasing­ly convinced that the West Wing is wholly unprepared to handle the expected assault from Democrats if they win the House in November, President Donald Trump’s aides and allies are privately raising alarm as his circle of legal and communicat­ions advisers continues to shrink.

With vacancies abounding in the White House and more departures on the horizon, there is growing concern among Trump allies that the brain drain at the center of the administra­tion could hardly come at a more perilous time. Special counsel Robert Mueller’s swirling probe of Russian election interferen­ce and potential obstructio­n of justice by Trump has reached ever closer to the Oval Office, and the upcoming midterm elections could grant his political adversarie­s the power of subpoena or, more worryingly, the votes to attempt impeachmen­t.

Nine current and former White House staffers and administra­tion allies are expressing concerns that the West Wing is simply unprepared for the potential troubles ahead. They spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Attrition, job changes and firings have taken their toll across the White House, but their impact has been felt particular­ly in the com- Special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion into Russia meddling has reached closer to the Oval Office. munication­s and legal shops — two department­s crucial to Trump staving off the looming threats. The upcoming departure of White House counsel Don McGahn has highlighte­d the challenges in an office that has shrunk by a third since last year.

McGahn’s deputy and chief of staff, Annie Donaldson, is also expected to leave soon after McGahn departs, two staffers said. Similarly, the White House press office is down to four press secretarie­s working on dayto-day White House matters, including Sarah Huckabee Sanders, and the regional and Cabinet affairs media teams in the communicat­ions office have been hollowed out.

The staffing shortage and struggles to recruit topflight talent have left the White House ill-prepared to handle the legal onslaught that may come when Mueller issues an expected report summarizin­g his findings and the flood of congressio­nal investigat­ions that could follow a Democratic takeover of the House.

Former Fox News executive Bill Shine, who joined the White House earlier this summer as communicat­ions director and deputy chief of staff, is looking to rebuild a shrunken media affairs team in anticipati­on of the challenges ahead.

Shine is said to be looking for seasoned communicat­ions profession­als to handle both Mueller-related questions and congressio­nal oversight requests.

“He’s doing a lot of thinking about how to properly structure everything, not only for a Trump White House but for what the next couple of years will be like,” said former White House press secretary Sean Spicer.

But like other White House department­s, the effort to fill jobs is proving difficult.

Qualified candidates are steering clear of the volatile West Wing, ignoring pleas from Shine and others to join the administra­tion over fears to their reputation and even potential legal exposure, according to current and former officials and one candidate approached by the White House. Those people and others spoke on condition of anonymity.

Others are wary of joining the team to defend the president, knowing he will often ignore their advice or could turn on them by tweet.

A White House official disputed that the administra­tion has had difficulty filling positions with talented people.

Trump allies have long boasted that he was his own political consultant during the 2016 campaign and serves as his own communicat­ions director inside the White House, but they are increasing­ly cautioning him that he can’t be his own attorney as well.

His outside legal team reached out to some of Washington’s most prominent attorneys, including Supreme Court litigator Ted Olson, before former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani — a longtime friend of the president whose erratic television interviews have defined his tenure — joined the team in April. Since then, Giuliani has been the primary public face of the defense team, along with Jay Sekulow, a lawyer specializi­ng in constituti­onal law and religious liberties. A husband-wife duo, Martin and Jane Raskin, was also added to work behind the scenes.

At the same time, the president is more volatile than ever, creating new challenges for his communicat­ion and legal teams.

Trump built his profession­al empire on a foundation of secrecy, enforced by fixers, lawyers, hush payments and non-disclosure agreements. Seeing that world collapse around him in recent weeks has yielded intense frustratio­n in the president, who has angrily told confidants that he feels betrayed by a number of former allies, including attorney Michael Cohen and National Enquirer chief David Pecker.

Trump has denounced the “sweetheart deal” received by Cohen, fumed about the prosecutio­n of former campaign chair Paul Manafort and seethed over the pressure on Pecker to agree to an immunity deal, according to two Republican­s close to the White House but not authorized to speak publicly about private conversati­ons.

Trump signaled he has settled on a successor for McGahn. “I am very excited about the person who will be taking the place of Don McGahn as White House Councel!” Trump tweeted Thursday. He sent a later tweet that spelled “counsel” correctly.

The expected pick to replace McGahn is White House is attorney Emmet Flood, who joined Trump’s White House in May as in-house counsel for the Mueller probe and has McGahn’s support in taking the role.

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SAUL LOEB/GETTY-AFP

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