Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Scaramucci brings White House drama into the open

- By Julie Bykowicz and Jonathan Lemire

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s new communicat­ions director exploded the smoldering tensions at the White House into a full-fledged conflagrat­ion Thursday, angrily daring Mr. Trump’s chief of staff to deny he’s a “leaker” and spilling into stark public view West Wing backstabbi­ng in language more suitable to a mobster movie than a seat of presidenti­al stability.

In a pull-no-punches, impromptu CNN interview that he said was authorized by the president, Anthony Scaramucci went after chief of staff Reince Priebus in graphic terms. “The fish stinks from the head down,” he said. “I can tell you two fish that don’t stink, and that’s me and the president.”

Not even a week into his new job, Mr. Scaramucci accused unidentifi­ed senior officials of trying to sabotage him and committing a felony by leaking informatio­n. But the personal financial informatio­n that he said someone had “leaked” about him had simply been obtained through a public records request.

Then in an interview published by The New Yorker late

Thursday, an angry Mr. Scaramucci used the F-word to accuse Mr. Priebus of being a “paranoid schizophre­nic” and used other vulgaritie­s to assert White House chief strategist Steve Bannon was trying to burnish his own reputation.

He also threatened to fire White House staffers who leaked about a dinner he had with the president.

“They’ll all be fired by me,” Mr. Scaramucci told the magazine. “I fired one guy the other day. I have three to four people I’ll fire tomorrow. I’ll get to the person who leaked that to you. Reince Priebus — if you want to leak something — he’ll be asked to resign very shortly.”

The New Yorker interview gave voice to the profane intensity of the warring West Wing factions that has defined much of Mr. Trump’s early administra­tion — but the level of candor and raging frustratio­n Mr. Scaramucci expressed yet again stunned a Washington political class that has become increasing­ly inured to the unorthodox­y of this White House.

By day’s end Mr. Scaramucci sounded calmer, though not regretful.

“I sometimes use colorful language. I will refrain in this arena but not give up the passionate fight for @realDonald­Trump’s agenda. #MAGA,” he tweeted. The tag at the end stands for Mr. Trump’s “Make America Great Again.”

He also blamed the reporter, Ryan Lizza. “I made a mistake in trusting in a reporter,” he added later. “It won’t happen again.”

White House spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders referred reporters to the first tweet.

The president’s senior counselor, Kellyanne Conway, had earlier speculated in a Fox News interview that unnamed forces were out to get Mr. Scaramucci, saying: “Somebody is trying to get in his way and scare him off.”

“There are leaks and then there are people using the press to shiv each other in the ribs,” she said.

Meanwhile, no one in the White House took up for Mr. Priebus — including Mr. Priebus himself. Ms. Sanders avoided giving a direct answer when asked whether Mr. Trump has confidence in Mr. Priebus.

The past 24 hours provided the clearest evidence yet that Mr. Scaramucci and Mr. Trump, both brash New Yorkers, are cut from the same cloth. One of their shared techniques: publicly shaming members of their own team.

Mr. Scaramucci’s goading of Mr. Priebus came as Mr. Trump continued to fume publicly and privately about his attorney general. Mr. Trump has been critical of Attorney General Jeff Sessions for recusing himself from the Justice Department investigat­ion into whether the president’s campaign had anything to do with Russian interferen­ce in the election last fall.

“It hasn’t been my best week ... for my relationsh­ip with the president,” Mr. Sessions acknowledg­ed in an interview with The Associated Press in El Salvador, where he was on a mission to increase internatio­nal cooperatio­n against gangs.

He said he would stay in his post and fight for Mr. Trump’s agenda “as long as he sees that as appropriat­e.”

Newt Gingrich, a former House speaker and frequent outside adviser to Mr. Trump, said in an interview that Mr. Scaramucci’s attacks on Mr. Priebus are problemati­c.

“They’ve got to get this sorted out between the two of them, and it would be nice if they didn’t do it in public,” he said.

Yet after Mr. Scaramucci’s call-in CNN performanc­e — a move lifted from his boss’ playbook — it was difficult to see how the two could mend fences.

“I don’t know if this is repairable or not — that will be up to the president,” Mr. Scaramucci said on air. He compared their relationsh­ip to that of brothers who are “rough on each other,” in5802 voking Cain and Abel.

 ?? Pablo Martinez Monsivais/Associated Press ?? White House communicat­ions director Anthony Scaramucci speaks during an interview with CNN on Wednesday at the White House.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais/Associated Press White House communicat­ions director Anthony Scaramucci speaks during an interview with CNN on Wednesday at the White House.

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