Los Angeles Times

Intelligen­ce chief choice withdrawn

Trump, unable to get bipartisan support for Rep. John Ratcliffe, suggests deputy could be the acting director.

- John Ratcliffe.

President Trump abandons his pick for director of national intelligen­ce, Rep. John Ratcliffe, amid concerns about his qualificat­ions for the job.

WASHINGTON — President Trump abruptly gave up his choice to serve as the nation’s next intelligen­ce chief Friday, tweeting that Rep. John Ratcliffe of Texas, who had gotten minimal support from Republican senators, was being mistreated by the media.

“Our great Republican Congressma­n John Ratcliffe is being treated very unfairly by the LameStream Media. Rather than going through months of slander and libel, I explained to John how miserable it would be for him and his family to deal with these people,” Trump wrote Friday on Twitter.

“... John has therefore decided to stay in Congress where he has done such an outstandin­g job representi­ng the people of Texas, and our Country. I will be announcing my nomination for DNI shortly,” he added.

Ratcliffe, a critic of Robert S. Mueller III’s special counsel investigat­ion of Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election, was announced last week as Trump’s choice to succeed former Sen. Dan Coats in the post of director of national intelligen­ce.

But Republican­s, many of whom were irked by Trump’s treatment of Coats, hedged on whether they would support Ratcliffe. In recent days, he drew controvers­y because of his apparent overstatem­ents of his national security experience. Most notably, he claimed to have prosecuted a major terrorism financing case when he was appointed to examine why the first of two trials ended in a mistrial.

In another potential reversal, Trump said Friday that he might allow Sue Gordon, Coats’ deputy, to serve as the acting director. He had previously suggested that he would circumvent the line of succession and install someone else, a decision that would have faced bipartisan resistance on Capitol Hill and within the intelligen­ce community.

White House officials had been looking at ways to bypass her even though, by law, she would normally take over while a permanent replacemen­t awaited confirmati­on.

Trump added that “certainly she will be considered” to serve temporaril­y.

Although the president accused reporters of being unfair to Ratcliffe, he also told them that “you vet for me” when asked why his administra­tion didn’t scrutinize the congressma­n’s resume before naming him.

“You save us a lot of money, actually,” he said.

James Jay Carafano, a Heritage Foundation foreign policy expert, said the Ratcliffe situation was indicative of Trump’s approach to personnel.

“He brings people in. If it doesn’t work out, you get rid of them and bring other people in,” he said.

The episode has created uncertaint­y around the intelligen­ce director position, which was created after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to coordinate the nation’s many intelligen­ce agencies and give the president nonpolitic­al advice. The director is, by law, supposed to have extensive experience in the field.

Critics of Ratcliffe, who was the mayor of a small Texas city before being elected to Congress in 2014, questioned whether he would be able or willing to provide facts to Trump that don’t match the president’s personal views.

Ratcliffe followed Trump’s tweets with his own, stating that he was “humbled” by the nomination but had asked Trump to remove him from considerat­ion.

“I do not wish for a national security and intelligen­ce debate surroundin­g my confirmati­on, however untrue, to become a purely political and partisan issue,” he wrote.

The withdrawal leaves Trump without a clear replacemen­t for Coats. The president told reporters that he had a few options but did not name them.

Senate Intelligen­ce Committee Chairman Richard M. Burr (R-N.C.) urged the White House to move quickly on another nominee.

“As the White House determines its next nominee, I’m heartened by the fact that ODNI has an experience­d and capable leadership team to help see it through this transition,” he said, referring to the office of the director of national intelligen­ce. “However, there is no substitute for having a Senate-confirmed director in place to lead our intelligen­ce community. I remain committed to moving the official nomination through regular order once it is submitted to the Senate.”

Burr’s reference to the office’s leadership team appeared to be a signal to Trump about Gordon, a well-regarded intelligen­ce profession­al who is considered politicall­y independen­t.

Trump’s resistance to her had upset many Democrats and some Republican­s.

“I think he’d be making a serious mistake. Sue Gordon is about the best you can get in terms of intelligen­ce profession­als,” said Larry Pfeiffer, who worked in the office when it was first created under President George W. Bush. “It just makes zero sense to appoint anybody other than Sue Gordon.”

Ratcliffe joins a growing list of people whom Trump has picked and then been forced to give up on — sometimes even before a formal nomination — after signals from Congress that the nominees would not be able to garner enough support for confirmati­on on Capitol Hill.

Trump frequently announces names without waiting for a formal vetting process, a practice that in some cases has opened his choices to humiliatin­g public disclosure­s.

In May, Trump had to give up on nominating Stephen Moore to the Federal Reserve Board after disclosure­s about his personal finances and articles he had written that several senators said disparaged women’s economic advancemen­t.

A month before that, Trump dropped plans to name Herman Cain, the former Republican presidenti­al hopeful, to the Fed.

Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (DN.Y.) referred to those cases as he welcomed Ratcliffe’s withdrawal.

“Rep. Ratcliffe never should have been considered in the first place. This is part of a pattern from President Trump: nomination on a whim without consultati­on or vetting, and then forced withdrawal when a mess ensues — just like what happened with Herman Cain, Stephen Moore, [secretary of Veterans Affairs nominee] Ronny Jackson and many more. The next director of national intelligen­ce must be someone who is nonpartisa­n, sees the world objectivel­y and speaks truth to power.”

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ??
Andrew Harnik Associated Press
 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? REP. John Ratcliffe was accused of overstatin­g his experience.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press REP. John Ratcliffe was accused of overstatin­g his experience.

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