Chicago Sun-Times

Top Trump, Clinton strategist­s clash

Conference conversati­on heats up over whether president- elect boosted, benefited from alt- right

- Susan Page

CAMBRIDGE, MASS. Top strategist­s for Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton clashed heatedly Thursday at a postelecti­on forum over the qualities of the candidates and the forces behind the Republican’s unexpected victory.

The conversati­on turned particular­ly contentiou­s over whether Trump had boosted and benefited from the so- called alt- right, a movement that includes white supremacis­ts and anti- Semitics.

“Hashtag, he’s your president, how about that?” Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway demanded after Clinton pollster Joel Benenson accused Trump of using “dog whistles” to appeal to bigots. “Will you accept the election results?”

“Kellyanne, hashtag, if he’s going to be my president he’s got to show me that white supremacy is not acceptable steps from the Oval Office,” Clinton adviser Karen Finney shot back, a reference to Trump strategist Steve Bannon, former CEO of a website popular with the alt- right.

The campaign managers, pollsters and other top aides from 16 presidenti­al campaigns gathered Wednesday and Thursday for a quadrennia­l conference that Harvard’s Institute of Politics has sponsored since 1972. Three weeks after Election Day, the conference was timed to take place while memories — and wounds— were still fresh.

For the Trump and Clinton strategist­s lined up on opposite sides of a long table, the arguments from the campaign were as fierce as ever.

The Clinton team argued she lost in large part not because of her own failings but because of unfair media coverage, campaign emails leaked by Russian intelligen­ce and unpreceden­ted public comments by FBI Director James Comey. She also faced an electorate angry at Washington and eager for change.

The Trump team argued he won because he connected with voters Democrats had ignored and dismissed. “Do you think you could just have a message for white working- class workers?” Conway said. “How about it’s Hillary Clinton? She doesn’t connect with people.”

Strategist­s for his GOP rivals acknowledg­ed Trump and his message resonated with the party’s base in a way few had foreseen.

“Trump was Godzilla walking into the power plant,” David Kochel, top strategist for former Florida governor Jeb Bush, said ruefully. “He touched the third rail; he touched the fourth rail; he touched the fifth rail, ( and) he just kept getting bigger.”

“Nobody cared about solutions,” said Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who ran the campaign of her father, former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee. “They wanted to burn it all down ... and figure out what to do with the ashes afterwards.”

Trump routinely rejected the advice of his senior strategist­s in a campaign that relied on his gut instincts and fit the mood of an angry electorate, former campaign manager Corey Lewandowsk­i said.

“You guys won,” Benenson said but noted that Clinton carried the popular vote. “Don’t act like you have some popular mandate for your message.”

Amid a rumble of protests from the Trump side, Conway told their side, “OK, guys, we won; you don’t have to respond.” She said to the Clinton side, “You’ve learned nothing about this election.”

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA, AP ?? Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway and Clinton campaign manager RobbyMook had plenty of choice words.
CHARLES KRUPA, AP Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway and Clinton campaign manager RobbyMook had plenty of choice words.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States