Los Angeles Times

Trump struggles to stick to script

Clinton’s template to survive impeachmen­t: Focus on the agenda. It’s proved difficult.

- By Eli Stokols

WASHINGTON — For 30 seconds during the nailbiting climactic World Series game, millions of Americans saw President Trump portrayed as an effective leader tending the nation’s business — boosting the economy and keeping the country safe while Democrats were zealous partisans pursuing impeachmen­t.

The depiction, complete with stirring music, came courtesy of Trump’s reelection campaign, airing its first national TV ad a year ahead of the 2020 election. Many Republican­s and Democrats believe that message will help Trump survive almost-certain impeachmen­t — because it worked 20 years ago for President Clinton.

He just has to stick to the script.

“There is no question that Bill Clinton really helped himself through impeachmen­t by sticking to his job,” said David Gergen, an advisor to four presidents, including Clinton. “The Trump campaign’s emphasis on his work as president is the right message. The real challenge to a strategy that emphasizes his accomplish­ments is that he keeps getting in the way.”

Clinton doubled Head Start funding and balanced the budget during his own House impeachmen­t fight in 1998. He avoided an impeachmen­t conviction in the Senate, thanks to steady public support, and he left office in 2001 with a 64% approval rating.

Trump, whose approval ratings have been mired in the low 40s, now can tout the U.S. military raid last month in northwest Syria that left

Islamic State leader Abu Bakr Baghdadi dead and the terrorist group in disarray. And he claimed credit Friday for record highs in the stock market a day after they had seesawed downward.

But those successes may prove an outlier for an impulsive, emboldened executive who has carried out a scattersho­t, unfocused response to impeachmen­t. In the six weeks since House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (DSan Francisco) launched the impeachmen­t inquiry, Trump has relished his reputation as a counterpun­cher — but he often appeared flat-footed, fighting back seemingly alone.

Trump has complained that Republican­s aren’t defending him ardently enough, while GOP allies in Congress have voiced concerns about dysfunctio­n in the White House and what has appeared much of the time to be a one-man war room.

He has added to his difficulti­es by announcing and then backing down on a U.S. troop pullout from Syria, and by announcing and then backing down on a plan to host the Group of 7 internatio­nal summit at one of his golf resorts. Both moves drew sharp rebukes from fellow Republican­s.

“Clinton was able to focus on the job because he truly, deeply loved it,” said Paul Begala, who served as Clinton’s White House counselor. “He is a policy wonk, and losing himself in the details of child care or Head Start was therapy for him. I suspect Mr. Trump does not have the same passion for policy.”

Though Trump’s approach differs, it may prove just as successful. House Republican­s voted unanimousl­y Thursday against a resolution that allows for public impeachmen­t-related hearings, though the measure passed anyway. More important, while several Republican­s in the Senate have criticized Trump’s behavior, none has formally broken with him over impeachmen­t, suggesting a likely acquittal if the Senate holds a trial.

Trump’s announceme­nt on Oct. 27 of the special forces raid that resulted in Baghdadi’s death turned from a sober, prewritten statement about national security into a sprawling, grievance-laden soliloquy on national TV, potentiall­y squanderin­g a chance to show him focused on his job despite the rancor of impeachmen­t.

Days earlier, several Republican senators had sat down for lunch with the president at the White House. Over plates of beef, they delivered an urgent, three-pointed message: Stop doing things to alienate GOP allies, keep the impeachmen­t message focused on decrying an “unfair” process, and maintain some semblance of an agenda.

According to a person familiar with the conversati­on, the senators told the White House that Trump’s plan to host the G-7 at his financiall­y troubled Doral golf resort, near Miami, would probably lead to an impeachmen­t article for violating the Constituti­on’s emoluments clause, one that some said they might support. Shortly afterward, Trump reversed course and said he would hold the summit elsewhere.

After the lunch, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) returned to Capitol Hill, where he held a news conference and reminded reporters, and perhaps the president, of how Clinton’s White House had responded to what it viewed as a partisan and unwarrante­d impeachmen­t led by Republican­s.

“He had a team that was organized, had legal minds that could understand what was being said [in] the legal proceeding­s in question,” Graham said. “They were on message every day. President Clinton defended himself, but he never stopped being president.”

The public may not have liked Clinton’s behavior with a White House intern, but people believed that he was still able to do his job, said Graham, who was a congressma­n at the time.

“And as he governed during impeachmen­t, I think that was probably the single best thing he did, quite frankly, to avoid” conviction in the Senate and removal from office, Graham said. “I’m hoping that will become the model here.”

The message, widely shared among Republican­s, apparently was not well received at the White House. Shortly after his news conference, Graham tried to temper his implicit criticism. “I did not mean to leave some with the impression the White House needed to hire a new team to handle impeachmen­t,” he tweeted. “My interactio­ns with the White House were in regards to a more coordinate­d strategy dealing with impeachmen­t.”

Unlike Trump, Clinton was somewhat receptive to criticism and appreciate­d the gravity of his political situation as the impeachmen­t investigat­ion advanced.

Robert Shrum, an unofficial advisor to Clinton on communicat­ion matters, recalled a private meeting in the Oval Office days after the first story broke of the president’s relationsh­ip with Monica Lewinsky. The annual State of the Union address was only a week away, and Shrum said Clinton appeared distracted during a Cabinet meeting.

“I’d known him since college and I said, ‘Can I see you for a minute?’ and we went into the Oval. I told him, ‘Eight days from now, you’re going to give this speech and the country’s going to decide if you should still be president.’ ”

After that, Shrum said, Clinton “was incredibly focused on the speech and he came out of it on an upswing…. He was incredibly discipline­d during this whole period in terms of the way he reacted, the way they put together a defense team, and they kept the country running.”

Trump, by contrast, often appears consumed by the impeachmen­t probe. Except for his family, none of his advisors apparently can deliver difficult messages, divert his attention from cable news or deter him from tweeting.

In the week after Pelosi launched the impeachmen­t inquiry Sept. 24, Trump tweeted 250 times — the most prolific period of his presidency — mostly about impeachmen­t. On a recent Saturday, he tweeted 59 times. During an Oval Office meeting with an outside advisor, Trump talked for 30 minutes about his hatred for CNN, according to a person familiar with the conversati­on.

“Clinton didn’t talk about impeachmen­t much,” Begala said. “He mostly talked about his agenda — and he acted on it. Every day, Clinton reminded the American people that while the hyperparti­san Republican­s were trying to impeach him, he was committed to making folks’ lives better.”

Trump has blasted “donothing Democrats” for trying to remove him from office, stating that he still wants to make progress on legislativ­e priorities, including infrastruc­ture and the revamped North American Free Trade Agreement. But little has happened.

And Chile’s cancellati­on of the planned Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit, due to anti-government protests in Santiago, dashed Trump’s hopes of meeting Chinese President Xi Jinping this month to nail down an elusive U.S.-China trade deal, depriving the White House of another possible accomplish­ment.

Concerned about Trump’s lack of focus, his former advisor Stephen K. Bannon launched a “War Room: Impeachmen­t” podcast last month, offering suggestion­s on strategy in an outside attempt to help the president improve his messaging.

After insisting a war room wasn’t necessary, the White House has tried building something of an organizati­on to coordinate its response, starting morning strategy calls between White House aides and Republican­s on Capitol Hill.

But daylight remains between Republican­s, who have mostly complained about the Democrats’ impeachmen­t process, and Trump, who wants allies to defend his actions — specifical­ly, his asking Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky for “a favor” during a July 25 phone call — as appropriat­e.

Senior White House officials are considerin­g hiring a deputy press secretary to focus exclusivel­y on impeachmen­t. But it hasn’t happened yet, and Trump remains his own most vocal spokesman.

Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham has not held an on-record briefing since starting the job in July. On Thursday, after House Democrats passed the impeachmen­t resolution, she blasted them for not “focusing on pressing issues that impact real families.”

On Friday, she argued again on Fox News that Democrats were overly focused on impeachmen­t. But she made clear that Trump is focused on leading his own defense, not a team of aides or lawyers.

“He is the war room,” she said.

Times staff writer Jennifer Haberkorn contribute­d to this report.

‘They were on message every day. President Clinton defended himself, but he never stopped being president.’ — Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), on the Clinton administra­tion’s response to GOP-led impeachmen­t proceeding­s

 ?? Tasos Katopodis Getty Images ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP last month announces the U.S. military raid in Syria that left Islamic State leader Abu Bakr Baghdadi dead.
Tasos Katopodis Getty Images PRESIDENT TRUMP last month announces the U.S. military raid in Syria that left Islamic State leader Abu Bakr Baghdadi dead.
 ?? George Bridges AFP/Getty Images ?? PRESIDENT CLINTON, with House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt and Vice President Al Gore, speaks after the House impeached him on Dec. 19, 1998.
George Bridges AFP/Getty Images PRESIDENT CLINTON, with House Minority Leader Richard Gephardt and Vice President Al Gore, speaks after the House impeached him on Dec. 19, 1998.

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