Los Angeles Times

A window into Trump’s psyche closes

President has gone silent since Twitter shut his account that had provided him an unfiltered platform.

- BY ELI STOKOLS

WASHINGTON — After four years of constant noise and controvers­y, President Trump’s f inal days in office have been eerily quiet, even as Congress weighs a second impeachmen­t — mostly because Twitter took away the digital platform that enabled him to boast and bully, and to overwhelm the attention spans of Americans and the media around the clock.

Since the company deleted his account Friday evening, saying he had abused it to incite what became a deadly riot at the Capitol, Trump has gone completely dark, apparently unwilling to use other platforms at his disposal. He has avoided the White House briefing room, stayed out of public view and granted no interviews, even to favored right- wing media figures.

An administra­tion official confirmed Monday that Trump met with Vice President Mike Pence in the Oval Office, the f irst interactio­n between them since Wednesday’s insurrecti­on in the Capitol. Though Pence had been vocally threatened by the mob, and hustled with his family from the Senate to safety, Trump never checked on his vice president, the administra­tion off icial said. Instead, he nursed his sense of betrayal that Pence had carried out his constituti­onal duty, against Trump’s wishes, to oversee Congress’ count of the electoral college votes rather than help overturn Joe Biden’s election.

As nerve- jangling as they have been, Trump’s realtime musings on Twitter had offered a remarkable and unpreceden­ted window into a president’s head. To no longer have them has been unnerving in its own way.

Suddenly, with Trump at his most isolated — abandoned by some Republican­s, Cabinet officials and pillars of corporate America, pursued again by Democrats in Congress and federal investigat­ors — few people outside his family and inner circle know what he’s thinking — or plotting — as his presidency ends.

For the last week, as Trump has turned more inward, into petulance and self- pity, his official daily schedule has been opaque, something of a sarcastic rejoinder to his longtime foils in the White House press corps. In the president’s familiar hyperbolic boasting, the public notices each day say only that he “will work from early in the morning until late in the evening. He will make many calls and have many meetings.”

Democrats, and some Republican­s, publicly call him an unhinged danger to national security, and there’s much speculatio­n about whom else he will pardon on his way out the White House. But without Twitter at his disposal, he hasn’t been able to f loat the more controvers­ial actions he may be considerin­g, to gauge the reaction from foes, allies and the public.

Similarly, his social media shunning has deprived Trump of the ability to lash out as he typically has done after real and perceived slights. He hasn’t hit back, for example, after the PGA’s cancellati­on of its plans to hold the 2022 PGA Championsh­ip at one of his golf courses. And he hasn’t publicly threatened the growing number of Republican­s in Congress who have excoriated him in recent days or even called for his resignatio­n or immediate removal.

“He’s neutered without Twitter,” one GOP congressio­nal aide said. “Members are starting to wake up to the fact that he’s powerless.”

Trump has been warned of his legal exposure stemming from the Capitol siege, which led to five deaths. His White House counsel and private attorneys have told him that he could face criminal and civil charges in the coming weeks and months, according to a person familiar with the conversati­ons.

There was confirmati­on of one event at the White House on Monday: For the second week in a row, Trump awarded the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, to one of his most obedient allies in Congress, Rep. Jim Jordan ( R- Ohio).

But he did so in a private Oval Office ceremony, opting not to invite the small pool of White House reporters, who’d be sure to shout questions.

The president, who has bestowed the honor on a number of athletes and celebritie­s who have been supportive of him, had been planning another medal ceremony for later in the week, for New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick.

But Monday night, the coach issued a statement that he “made the decision not to move forward” with accepting the award after “the tragic events of last week” — stopping short of criticizin­g Trump directly but emphasizin­g his determinat­ion to continue “conversati­ons about social justice, equality and human rights” that he said “outweigh the benefits of any individual award.”

It was the sort of embarrassi­ng rejection Trump would typically seek to explain away in a tweet, but in this case there were none.

On Tuesday, Trump plans to travel to Alamo, Texas, along the border with Mexico, to highlight progress toward erecting a physical barrier and slowing the f low of immigratio­n, illegal and lawful, into the country. The taxpayer- f inanced constructi­on, however, is far from the wall that candidate Trump had promised in 2016 to build along the entire 2,000- mile border, at Mexico’s expense.

The planned trip came about after aides, hoping to rein in his more self- destructiv­e impulses, urged him to spend the f inal days of his term celebratin­g various accomplish­ments, according to two people familiar with internal conversati­ons at the White House.

But little else is known about the president’s plans for his remaining days inside a White House already mostly hollowed out. While two Cabinet officials and a number of aides resigned last week in disgust over Trump’s incitement of the insurrecti­on at the Capitol, others still technicall­y on the job have been avoiding the West Wing. On Monday a third Cabinet official, acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf, announced he was resigning effective at midnight.

That has left Trump with only a small coterie of acquiescen­t aides assisting him: Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, social media maven Dan Scavino, personnel director John McEntee and speechwrit­er Stephen Miller.

“Those are not exactly the people who are going to rein him in,” said one administra­tion official, speaking on condition of anonymity. Their encouragem­ent of Trump’s determined lying about the election result, the official continued, is “why he’s in this position in the first place.”

As he has done throughout his presidency, Trump has continued to solicit advice from friends and former staffers. In recent days, three people who have spoken with the president have painted a picture of an angry, defiant lame duck concerned with his possible legal exposure upon leaving office.

He has, according to one person who has spoken with him, f loated the possibilit­y of preemptive­ly pardoning himself, which would pose a historic test of a president’s powers. In effect, he would be using his office to make himself immune to the country’s laws. Trump’s discussion of a self- pardon was f irst reported by the New York Times.

But he has also expressed uncertaint­y, the person said, about whether a pardon would protect him from state charges — it would not — or backfire politicall­y.

Additional­ly, Trump has had conversati­ons about whether to appoint a special counsel to investigat­e his allegation­s of corruption related to the foreign business dealings of Hunter Biden, son of Trump’s successor, which the Trump campaign had hoped would gain more traction with voters last year.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP, shown at an October campaign rally, has been unwilling to use other media avenues since Twitter shut him down after the Capitol riot.
ALEX BRANDON ASSOCIATED PRESS PRESIDENT TRUMP, shown at an October campaign rally, has been unwilling to use other media avenues since Twitter shut him down after the Capitol riot.

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