Los Angeles Times

Amid fallout, Kelly’s fate is unclear

Trump aides defend his chief of staff as questions swirl over Porter abuse scandal.

- By Laura King and Michael Finnegan

WASHINGTON — President Trump, who has pushed out a string of senior aides since taking office, is upset with Chief of Staff John F. Kelly and would like to replace him, but Republican congressio­nal leaders and strategist­s are strongly counseling him against feeding the perception of an inner circle in nonstop disarray, a person close to the White House said.

Hoping to quell the furor, the White House scrambled aides Sunday to publicly defend Kelly and his handling of the domestic violence allegation­s against White House Staff Secretary Rob Porter, who resigned or was fired Wednesday, a day after Kelly had praised him as “a man of integrity and honor.”

The aides denied reports that Kelly had offered his resignatio­n, but they continued to hedge on when Kelly and other senior White House officials learned that Porter’s two ex-wives had accused him of physical and emotional abuse. Porter has denied the allegation­s.

By reminding voters of Trump’s own problems with the #MeToo movement against abuse of women, the latest White House turmoil threatened to overshadow, at least for now, the broader GOP efforts to craft a positive message about the

economy and the tax cut bill before the November election.

Three top White House officials — legislativ­e director Marc Short, budget director Mick Mulvaney and senior advisor Kellyanne Conway — fanned out to Sunday talk shows to say Trump has full confidence in Kelly despite the questions about when he learned that Porter’s ex-wives had told the FBI of his violent outbursts.

That placed the White House in the awkward position of accepting as credible the women’s allegation­s against Porter, even as Trump took to Twitter on Saturday to defend the right of “due process” for those accused of abusive behavior or sexual misconduct — not to defend the victims.

“Peoples lives are being shattered and destroyed by a mere allegation,” Trump wrote. “Some are true and some are false. Some are old and some are new. There is no recovery for someone falsely accused — life and career are gone. Is there no such thing any longer as Due Process?”

More than a dozen women have publicly accused Trump of sexual harassment or assault over a period of many years. He says they are all lying and has dismissed a 2005 audio recording from the TV show “Access Hollywood” that captured him boasting in vulgar terms about such behavior as “locker room” talk.

The Porter controvers­y has brought intense scrutiny of Kelly’s role in protecting him, but Conway said on ABC’s “This Week” that Trump “is not actively searching for replacemen­ts” for the retired Marine fourstar general, who has sought to impose discipline on a chaotic West Wing.

Conway said Trump also has full confidence in Hope Hicks, a former campaign aide who became White House communicat­ions director. News reports have said Hicks was romantical­ly involved with Porter and helped craft an initial forceful White House statement defending him.

A person close to the White House, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the president had not authorized him to characteri­ze their private conversati­ons, said he expects Trump to keep Kelly rather than choose a third chief of staff. Kelly replaced Reince Priebus, who served in the White House for only six months.

“I would say 95% certain that Kelly will stay,” the person said, adding that the president was disturbed and caught by surprise by the Porter episode, particular­ly because it involved Hicks, whom he trusts deeply.

But Kelly’s ability to be effective has suffered. Over the last few days, various White House aides have buttonhole­d reporters to tell them — anonymousl­y — that they think Kelly either lied to them or tried to get them to lie about what he knew when.

In their Sunday talkshow appearance­s, the White House aides sought to downplay those concerns.

Speaking on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Short said he did not know “who knew what when” about the exwives’ statements to the FBI regarding Porter, which apparently prevented him from obtaining more than an interim security clearance.

More than a year into the Trump administra­tion, Short also defended the White House’s practice of allowing people with only interim security clearances to access some of the nation’s most highly classified intelligen­ce materials.

Those staffers include Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, a senior advisor with a portfolio that includes a search for peace in the Middle East. Kushner also has been caught up in the special counsel investigat­ion into Russian meddling in the 2016 election for his meetings with Russian officials during the campaign.

The churn of turnover has been a constant in an otherwise unpredicta­ble White House.

Trump lost his national security advisor Michael Flynn within weeks because of his own meetings with Russians, and he was followed out the door by shortlived communicat­ions director Anthony Scaramucci, Priebus and chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon.

Flynn has pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI. So has another Trump campaign aide, George Papadopoul­os. Paul Manafort, who served as Trump’s campaign manager, was arrested in October and is awaiting trial on charges of fraud and conspiracy. So is Richard Gates, who was deputy chair of the Trump campaign.

The wrenching departures have taken their toll on the president.

“He was just completely isolated,” said the person close to the White House. “People with him from the start are gone.”

As is often the case, the president made the task of those trying to smooth over a controvers­y more difficult. Conway and Short said the White House takes the issue of domestic violence seriously despite the president’s tweet that seemed to defend the accused, not the victim.

Asked about the tweet on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Conway said she had “no reason not to believe the women” who accused Porter of violence when the FBI interviewe­d them in connection with his security clearance.

“In this case, you have contempora­neous police reports, you have women speaking to the FBI under threat of perjury ... you have photograph­s, and when you look at all of that pulled together, Rob Porter did the right thing by resigning,” Conway said.

Short said on NBC that he believes Trump is “very disturbed” by the allegation­s. But he also said Trump’s attitude was “shaped by a lot of false accusation­s against him [Trump] in the past.”

Kelly and other senior aides were aware by late last fall of Porter’s difficulty in obtaining a clearance due to accusation­s by his former wives, but it was unclear whether Kelly was aware of the extent of the alleged physical abuse.

Some Democrats piled on, questionin­g Kelly’s viability in the job.

“Hard to see how Kelly survives,” David Axelrod, a former senior aide to President Obama, tweeted. He said either Kelly didn’t know what he should have, or “likely truth, based on the timeline: He knew and looked the other way.”

Axelrod, now a commentato­r, called the handling of the matter “a textbook case of how not to deal with a bad situation” — which he said was made worse not only by Kelly, but also by Trump.

Mulvaney, whose name has been floated as a possible replacemen­t for Kelly, sought to dispel any indication he was seeking the job.

“I don’t want that job,” Mulvaney said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.” He added: “I think the chief of staff is doing a really good job — and most importantl­y, I think the president thinks he’s doing a great job as well.”

 ?? Olivier Contreras Sipa USA ?? CHIEF OF Staff John F. Kelly initially defended a staffer accused of abuse.
Olivier Contreras Sipa USA CHIEF OF Staff John F. Kelly initially defended a staffer accused of abuse.
 ?? Jabin Botsford Washington Post ?? CHIEF of Staff John F. Kelly, left, prays in December with communicat­ions director Hope Hicks and Rob Porter, who has been accused of abusing his two ex-wives.
Jabin Botsford Washington Post CHIEF of Staff John F. Kelly, left, prays in December with communicat­ions director Hope Hicks and Rob Porter, who has been accused of abusing his two ex-wives.

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