Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump claims “no politician in history” has been “treated worse or more unfairly,”

In speech, Trump signals that he is gearing up for a fight

- By Vivian Salama and Darlene Superville

NEW LONDON, Conn. — President Donald Trump lashed out Wednesday at his “critics and naysayers” following more than a week of negative news coverage beginning with his sudden decision to fire James Comey as FBI director.

Mr. Trump began his speech to the newest group of U.S. Coast Guard officers with a tribute to the service’s efforts to stop drug dealers on domestic waterways and the open seas. But he quickly changed the subject to himself, apparently signaling that he was gearing up for a fight after a week of damaging disclosure­s.

In the address, Mr. Trump urged the 195 graduates in the Class of 2017 to “put your head down and fight, fight, fight” when life presents them with challenges and adversity.

“The people understand what I’m doing, and that’s the most important thing,” he told cheering cadets at the New London, Conn., ceremony. Mr. Trump’s appearance at the academy came the day after reports that he had personally appealed to Mr. Comey to abandon the FBI’s investigat­ion into former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn. Mr. Trump fired Mr. Flynn earlier this year for misleading top White House officials about his contacts with Russian officials.

The White House has denied the latest report, which landed amid a furor over the president’s recent Oval Office meeting with Russian diplomats in which Mr. Trump is said to have disclosed classified informatio­n. The White House has said it was “wholly appropriat­e” for Mr. Trump to share the informatio­n.

Later, Mr. Trump commented late Wednesday after the Justice Department announced the appointmen­t of former FBI director Robert Mueller to oversee the probe into Trump-Russian connection in the 2016 election.

The president pledged to never stop fighting for the people and issues that are important to the country’s future, and said in a written statement that he looks forward to “this matter concluding quickly.”

White House staffers have been left exhausted and frustrated amid the string of crises as foreign policy experts wondered whether Mr. Trump should cancel his first foreign trip, fearing it could endin disaster.

The mood was viewed as particular­ly dour among staffers preparing for that trip, writing press releases, readying talking points or crafting the speech Mr. Trump is to give to Muslim leaders in Saudi Arabia. They continued to speak to and brief reporters about the trip but didn’t have much to say about the swirling controvers­ies involving Russia. At least one staffer was seen as visibly weary.

“It’s a grim environmen­t,” said a former Trump adviser who is in regular contact with White House officials but did not want to speak publicly because of the sensitivit­y ofthe issue.

Mr. Trump did not mention Mr. Comey during the nearly half-hour address earlier Wednesday, but was seen as alluding to the multiple controvers­ies swirling around him.

“Look at the way I’ve been treated lately, especially by the media,” Mr. Trump said. “No politician in history, and I say this with great surety, has been treated worse or more unfairly. You can’t let them get you down. You can’t let the critics and the naysayers get in the way of your dreams.”

“I guess that’s why we won,” he said, before continuing to offer the graduates his advice.

“Adversity makes you stronger. Don’t give in, don’t back down and never stop doing what you know is right,” Mr. Trump said. “Nothing worth doing ever, ever, ever came easy and the more righteous your fight, the more opposition that you will face.”

Mr. Trump also praised the newly minted Coast Guard officers, emphasizin­g that they will be an asset as new members of the U.S. military to his efforts to protect the homeland, protect U.S. harbors and seas from drug smuggling and human traffickin­g, and keep out “all who seek to do harm to our country.”

“Together, we have the same mission and your devotion and dedication makes me truly proud to be your commander in chief,” he said.

Despite Mr. Trump’s praise, a financial outline for the Department of Homeland Security prepared by the White House budget office calls for scrapping the Coast Guard’s counterter­rorism Maritime Security Response Team, and all of its Maritime Safety and Security Teams.

The rationale for eliminatin­g the programs wasn’t spelled out in the document released earlier this year. Mr. Trump has made fighting terrorism a top priority, and his overall budget outline calls for significan­t increases in military spending. The Coast Guard is a division of the Department of Homeland Security.

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