Back from France, Trump faces fracas
His Russia troubles grow, health care bill still mired in Senate
WASHINGTON — He’ll always have Paris.
President Donald Trump returned Friday from being feted in France to confront new, damaging revelations in the investigation into whether his associates coordinated with Russian efforts to sway the 2016 election, as well ss perilous signs in Congress for the Republican health care bill that is one of his major campaign pledges.
Frustrated and unhappy with how his team has handled the response to the steady drip of damaging information, Trump has reportedly decided to hire Ty Cobb, a longtime Washington lawyer, to manage the White House’s political and legal responses to Russia investigation.
While the White House continues to wrestle with the investigation, Trump’s first major legislative push — to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act — continues to be threatened by seemingly insurmountable Republican divisions. Friday morning, minutes before being welcomed as the guest of honor for the Bastille Day military parade on the Champs-Elysees, the grand boulevard of Paris, Trump was stewing over his party’s inability to get a law to his desk.
As his motorcade was waiting, he let loose a string of Twitter messages admonishing Senate Republicans, even though Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky has told administration officials that such social media messages are not helpful.
“After all of these years of suffering thru ObamaCare, Republican Senators must come through as they have promised!” Trump wrote on Twitter.
Thousands of miles from troubles in Washington, Trump seemed buoyed by his trip to France.
He talked animatedly with France’s President Emmanuel Macron while watching French and American troops, armored personnel carriers, tanks, missile launchers and other military equipment parade for more than two hours from the Arc de Triomphe down the grand avenue.
Dozens of military planes and helicopters thundered overhead, with one formation of fighter jets painting the sky with streaks of red, white and blue smoke signifying the tri-colors of both nations.
The newly elected Macron had invited Trump on short notice for France’s national day celebrations and to mark the 100th anniversary of American troops’ arrival in France to help fight German forces in World War I.
Bands played traditional French marching music. At one point a marching band spelled out the word “NICE” in front of the VIP reviewing stand, in memory of 86 people killed a year earlier by an Islamic extremist driving a cargo truck into Bastille Day celebrations in that French city.
“The presence today of the U.S. President Donald Trump and his wife is the sign of a friendship that lasts through time,” Macron said at the conclusion of the parade.
France has found “sure allies, friends who came to help us,” he said. “The United States of America are among them. That is why nothing will separate us, never.”
Macron seemed eager to woo Trump personally, and substantively. He focused their meetings Thursday on issues the two administrations can cooperate on, including counter-terrorism and Syria.
Macron did not bring up contentious issues such as Trump’s withdrawal from the Paris climate accords, Trump’s homeland security adviser Tom Bossert told reporters flying with the president back to the U.S.
Climate issues “didn’t chill or infect or in any way come up verbally or through nonverbal cues in our conversations,” Bossert said.
Trump stepped off Air Force One on Friday afternoon, opening a large black umbrella to keep rain off himself and first lady Melania Trump as they walked to the motorcade taking the couple to Trump’s golf club in Bedminster, N.J., for the weekend. He planned to attend the U.S. Women’s Open golf tournament being held there.
The last time the president had a rainy weekend in Bedminster he watched television news, fumed — and by his own later account — decided to fire FBI director James Comey because of Comey’s pursuit of the Russia investigation.
The weather forecast called for the clouds to part Saturday and the sun to be out all weekend.