El Dorado News-Times

Sequel to Trump's first year opens with crises, unease

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The sequel to President Donald Trump's first year in office is opening with the lead player hamstrung by a government shutdown and hunkering down amid investigat­ions, crises and political unease.

After 365 days in the Oval Office, Trump has found that his drive to deliver quickly on campaign promises has yielded to the sobering reality of governing — and the prospect of an electoral rebuke in November. Administra­tion aides, outside allies and Republican­s on Capitol Hill see the Trump White House continuing to face many of the same challenges it wrestled with last year, with fresh plot twists to boot.

Special counsel Robert Mueller's probe into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election keeps moving ever closer to the Oval Office. The government shutdown highlights the legislativ­e challenges that persist even with Republican­s controllin­g the White House and both the House and Senate, and makes clear the administra­tion's need to more carefully target its political capital on specific agenda items. And the fall elections are shaping up as a referendum on Trump's tenure.

"In the second year, you no longer are one-dimensiona­l," said Ari Fleischer, press secretary when George W. Bush was president. "There's an inevitable pivot that every administra­tion makes, and that is to recognize that it's no longer about future events and promises, it's now about defending and promoting last year's accomplish­ments."

No administra­tion comes into office fully ready for the task of leading the government, and Trump's team has taken disruption to a new extreme. Republican­s outside the White House are now hoping the Trump administra­tion will be more politicall­y savvy. But the 71-year old president has proved set in his ways, trusting his instincts over the advice of his aides, and there is no reason to expect that won't continue.

Yet Trump has been changed by the experience­s of the past year, according to aides and outside advisers, most of whom spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss internal dynamics. The president has grown more fearful of leaks. His inner circle of friends is smaller, most recently with the banishment of former chief strategist Steve Bannon. This smaller group of informal advisers has seen Trump favor those who tell him what he likes to hear, according to several people who talk to him regularly. And that, combined with chief of staff John Kelly's determinat­ion not to manage the president, is furthering the Trump's impulsive streak.

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