Imperial Valley Press

Trump’s impulses put White House credibilit­y on the line

-

WASHINGTON (AP) — What’s the White House’s word worth?

Days of conflictin­g and misleading statements from President Donald Trump and his top aides have fueled new questions about the White House’s credibilit­y, sowing mistrust and instabilit­y within the West Wing and leaving some congressio­nal Republican­s wondering if they have a good faith negotiatin­g partner in the president. One former congressio­nal GOP leadership aide said it was becoming impossible for Republican­s to negotiate anything with White House officials, given the president’s willingnes­s to undermine his own team’s public and private assurances. In turn, White House officials have found themselves in the bizarre position of urging lawmakers to ignore some of the president’s own statements.

That was the case on Friday, when Trump blasted out a morning tweet threatenin­g to veto a massive government spending bill that the White House had guaranteed lawmakers and the public that he would sign. White House officials privately insisted the president was simply venting after watching news coverage that cast the deal as a defeat for several of his priorities. After hours of uncertaint­y, Trump’s veto threat crumbled, and he ultimately signed the legislatio­n.

Still, it left some Republican­s rattled.

“The spontaneit­y and lack of impulse control are areas of concern for lots of members on both sides of the aisle,” said Rep. Charlie Dent, a Pennsylvan­ia Republican who has been critical of the president. “Disorder, chaos, instabilit­y, uncertaint­y, intemperat­e statements are not conservati­ve virtues in my opinion.”

Trent Lott, the former Republican Senate majority leader from Mississipp­i, said GOP lawmakers “feel a good deal of consternat­ion” about the White House-induced whiplash. But he added: “I assume there was method in what the president did.” Members of both parties said they were troubled that Trump seems oblivious to how he has undermined his own clout and agenda by staking out positions and then brazenly abandoning them. Where legislator­s once might have attributed such missteps to the president’s newness to Washington and its ways, not anymore.

Trump’s vacillatin­g on the spending bill was just one in a series of recent instances that put the credibilit­y of the White House’s words under a microscope. Earlier this month, Trump bragged at a private fundraiser about having made up facts on trade during a conversati­on with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. And in recent days, he and his staff have issued stern denials about the prospects of national security adviser H.R. McMaster departing the White House and a potential shake-up on the legal team that handles Trump’s role in the special counsel investigat­ion into Russian election interferen­ce and obstructio­n of justice. Beyond public statements, White House chief of staff John Kelly had privately assured his staff that no shakeup was on the horizon. By week’s end, McMaster was out. And the legal team had lost one attorney and appeared to be looking for another one.

Trump’s trouble with the truth is hardly new. He frequently mangles the facts on everything from the size of his inaugurati­on crowd to the scope of the tax bill he signed late last year. And as his boasting about his interactio­n with Trudeau underscore­d, the president rarely appears to be embarrasse­d or ashamed about repeating statements that have been proven false.

 ??  ?? In this March 23 photo, President Donald Trump walks into the Diplomatic Room of the White House in Washington, to speak about the $1.3 trillion spending bill. Days of conflictin­g and misleading statements from Trump and his top aides have fueled new...
In this March 23 photo, President Donald Trump walks into the Diplomatic Room of the White House in Washington, to speak about the $1.3 trillion spending bill. Days of conflictin­g and misleading statements from Trump and his top aides have fueled new...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States