Marin Independent Journal

`Lacking character' to `extraordin­ary president'

- By Annie Karni and Steve Eder

Years before he played a lead role in trying to help President Donald Trump stay in office after the 2020 election or defended him in two separate Senate impeachmen­t trials, House Speaker Mike Johnson bluntly asserted that Trump was unfit to serve and could be a danger as president.

“The thing about Donald Trump is that he lacks the character and the moral center we desperatel­y need again in the White House,” Johnson wrote in a lengthy post on Facebook on Aug. 7, 2015, before he was elected to Congress and a day after the first Republican primary debate of the campaign cycle.

Challenged in the comments by someone defending Trump, Johnson responded: “I am afraid he would break more things than he fixes. He is a hot head by nature, and that is a dangerous trait to have in a Commander in Chief.”

Johnson, then a state lawmaker in Louisiana, also questioned what would happen if “he decided to bomb another head of state merely disrespect­ing him.”

“I am only halfway kidding about this,” he wrote. “I just don't think he has the demeanor to be President.”

The comments came at a time when many Republican­s who would later become loyalists of Trump were disparagin­g him and declaring him unfit to hold the nation's highest office. Only later did they fall in line and serve as the firstline defenders of his most extreme words and actions.

But Johnson's antiTrump screed has, until now, flown under the radar, in a large part because Johnson himself did, too, before his unlikely election as speaker last month put him second in line to the presidency.

These days, Johnson only praises Trump and defends him against what he dismisses as politicall­y motivated indictment­s and criminal charges. Trump has lauded Johnson as someone who has acted as a loyal soldier since the beginning of his political rise.

In a lengthy statement to The New York Times attempting to distance himself from the comments, Johnson endorsed Trump's 2024 presidenti­al campaign publicly for the first time, and said his earlier statements were made before he personally knew Trump. He attributed them to the fact that “his style was very different than mine.”

“During his 2016 campaign, President Trump quickly won me and millions of my fellow Republican­s over,” Johnson said. “When I got to know him personally shortly after we both arrived in Washington in 2017, I grew to appreciate the person that he is and the qualities about him that made him the extraordin­ary president that he was.”

Johnson, who campaigned for Trump in 2020, added: “Since we met, we have always had a very good and friendly relationsh­ip. The president and I enjoy working together, and I look forward to doing so again when he returns to the White House.”

A spokespers­on for Trump declined to comment on the posts.

In 2015, Johnson, who would announce his first run for Congress the next year, wrote that he was horrified as he watched Trump's debate performanc­e with his wife and children.

“What bothered me most was watching the face of my exceptiona­l 10 yr old son, Jack, at one point when he looked over at me with a sort of confused disappoint­ment, as the leader of all polls boasted about calling a woman a `fat pig.'”

In one of the most famous exchanges from that debate, Megyn Kelly, a moderator and then a Fox News host, asked Trump about his history of referring to women as “fat pigs, dogs, slobs and disgusting animals.”

“Only Rosie O'Donnell,” Trump responded. He added that the country's problem was political correctnes­s, something he didn't have time for. Johnson was horrified. “Can you imagine the noble, selfless characters of Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Lincoln or Reagan carrying on like Trump did last night?” wrote Johnson, an evangelica­l Christian. He noted that voters needed to demand a “much higher level of virtue and decency” than what he had just witnessed.

During the Trump administra­tion, Johnson enjoyed a friendly relationsh­ip with the president. In 2020, he accompanie­d him, along with other House Republican­s, to the college football national championsh­ip game between Louisiana State University and Clemson University.

After the election that year, he played a leading role in recruiting House Republican­s to sign a legal brief, rooted in baseless claims of widespread election irregulari­ties, supporting a lawsuit seeking to overturn the results. On Nov. 8, 2020, Johnson was onstage at a northwest

Louisiana church speaking about Christiani­ty in America when Trump called him to discuss legal challenges to the election results.

In recent years, Johnson, a constituti­onal lawyer, has used a podcast he hosted with his wife to defend Trump against four different indictment­s and the criminal charges against him.

“I think every single one of these bogus prosecutio­ns is overtly weaponized political prosecutio­ns of Donald Trump,” Johnson said on one episode.

On another, Johnson proclaimed, “No one did it better in the White House than President Trump.”

In last month's speaker's race, Trump praised Johnson, noting that he was someone who had “supported me, in both mind and spirit, from the very beginning of our GREAT 2016 Victory.”

Johnson is far from alone in having expressed deep concerns about Trump, only to go on to later embrace him and his agenda.

In 2015, Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina called Trump a “race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot,” as well as a “kook,” “crazy” and a man who was “unfit for office.” He went on to serve as Trump's most loyal defender in the Senate.

Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, the second-to-last man left standing in the 2016 Republican primary race, called Trump a “pathologic­al liar” who was “utterly amoral,” a “serial philandere­r” and a “narcissist at a level I don't think this country's ever seen.” Cruz has explained his decision to become a loyal defender of Trump as something that was a “responsibi­lity” to his constituen­ts.

Mick Mulvaney, the former Republican member of Congress who went on to serve as the president's acting chief of staff, in 2016 called his future boss a “terrible human being” who had made “disgusting and indefensib­le” comments about women.

Unlike the other lawmakers who fell in line, however, Johnson has pitched himself as someone of deep religious conviction­s, whose worldview is driven by his faith.

 ?? KENNY HOLSTON — THE NEW YORK TIMES, FILE ?? House Speaker Mike Johnson speaks at a news conference on Capitol Hill. Johnson, at the time a Republican state lawmaker, posted on social media in 2015 that Donald Trump lacked the character and morality to be president and could be vindictive.
KENNY HOLSTON — THE NEW YORK TIMES, FILE House Speaker Mike Johnson speaks at a news conference on Capitol Hill. Johnson, at the time a Republican state lawmaker, posted on social media in 2015 that Donald Trump lacked the character and morality to be president and could be vindictive.

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