Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump’s summer of discontent bleeds into fall

Approval ratings continue to drop

- Associated Press By Julie Pace

WASHINGTON — After a summer of staff shake-ups and self-made crises, President Donald Trump is emerging politicall­y damaged, personally agitated and continuing to buck at the confines of his office, according to some close allies.

For weeks, the West Wing has been upended by a reorganiza­tion that Mr. Trump has endorsed and, later, second-guessed, including his choice of retired Marine Gen. John Kelly as chief of staff. The president recently lashed out at Gen. Kelly after a boisterous rally in Phoenix, an incident relayed by a person with knowledge of the matter. In private conversati­ons, Mr. Trump has leveled indiscrimi­nate and harsh criticism on the rest of his remaining team.

Seven months into his tenure, Mr. Trump has yet to put his mark on any signature legislatio­n and his approval ratings are sagging. Fellow Republican­s have grown weary of his volatility, and Mr. Trump spent the summer tangling with some of the same lawmakers he’ll need to work with in the coming weeks to pass a government funding bill, raise the country’s borrowing limit and make a difficult bid for tax overhaul legislatio­n.

“He’s in a weak position,” said Christophe­r Ruddy, the CEO of Newsmax and a longtime Trump friend. “A lot of the Republican establishm­ent has not been supportive, his poll numbers are down and he has spent most of his early presidency appealing to his base while most presidents would be seeking more consensus.”

That sentiment was echoed in interviews with 10 White House officials, Republican operatives and others with close ties to the president. Most spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to disclose private conversati­ons with the president and his staff.

Some White House officials believe Mr. Trump did find his footing during the response to Hurricane Harvey, which they say has given him an opening to demonstrat­e presidenti­al leadership. Mr. Trump has eagerly promoted the federal government’s response and recovery efforts, and on Saturday was making his second visit to the region in a week.

The White House has asked Congress for an initial $7.9 billion in emergency aid, a request expected to win quick approval.

During an Oval Office event Friday, Mr. Trump struck a rare unifying tone: “As Americans, we know that no challenge is too great for us to overcome — no challenge.”

But the government’s largely well-received handling of the storm has not soothed Mr. Trump’s own frustratio­ns, according to those who speak with him regularly. Mr. Trump told one associate he missed his old life in New York. And he has become increasing­ly focused on the prospect of losing support among his core supporters — the voters he once said would stick with him even if he shot someone on New York’s Fifth Avenue.

“I don’t think it’s a worry or a concern as much as it’s a reality,” Roger Stone, a longtime informal adviser to the president, said of Mr. Trump’s preoccupat­ion with his base. “It’s a reality that he understand­s politicall­y.”

Polls show Mr. Trump losing a bit of ground with some of his core constituen­cies. A Fox News survey released last week put Mr. Trump’s overall approval rating at 41 percent, and notably cited a 7 percentage point drop among conservati­ves and a 9-point drop among whites without a college degree, one of Mr. Trump’s strongest voting groups.

The recent reorganiza­tion in the White House has done little to determine the ideologica­l course of Mr. Trump’s presidency or shed light on how he will approach the looming showdowns in Congress.

While strategist Steve Bannon, who repeatedly preached to Mr. Trump the importance of fulfilling his campaign promises, left the White House shortly after Gen. Kelly’s arrival, the president has made aggressive moves on some of the issues Mr. Bannon promoted. Mr. Trump said he would shut down the government next month unless Republican­s give him money to build a wall along the U.S.Mexico border and he issued a controvers­ial pardon for former Sheriff Joe Arpaio of Arizona. Mr. Trump is also considerin­g rolling back deportatio­n protection­s for young people brought to the U.S. illegally as children, a step he previously intimated to top advisers that he would rather avoid.

Some GOP lawmakers are urging Mr. Trump to keep those immigratio­n protection­s, and longtime allies are encouragin­g him to think beyond the wishes of the voters who pack Mr. Trump’s raucous rallies.

“Steve Bannon got the president and a lot of people believing they had to fulfill a checklist number of promises I don’t believe his supporters require him to do that,” Mr. Ruddy said.

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