San Francisco Chronicle

Trump returns to face growing controvers­ies

- By Maggie Haberman, Glenn Thrush and Julie Hirschfeld Maggie Haberman, Glenn Thrush and Julie Hirschfeld are New York Times writers.

President Trump returned home Saturday to confront a growing political and legal threat, as his top aides tried to contain the fallout from reports that his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, is a focus of investigat­ions into possible collusion between Russia and the president’s campaign and transition teams.

As Trump ended a nine-day overseas trip that aides considered the most successful stretch of his presidency, he was returning to a crisis that had only grown in his absence. The White House canceled a presidenti­al trip to Iowa in the coming days and was putting together a damage-control plan to expand the president’s legal team, reorganize his communicat­ions staff and wall off a scandal that has jeopardize­d his agenda and now threatens to engulf his family.

Trump’s private legal team, led by his New York lawyer, Marc Kasowitz, was preparing to meet in Washington to face fresh questions about contacts between Kushner and representa­tives of President Vladimir Putin of Russia. The president may meet with Kasowitz as early as Sunday.

Kushner, who organized the president’s Middle East stops at the start of the foreign trip, has no plans to step down from his role as senior adviser or to reduce his duties, according to people close to him.

Still, there are signs that Kushner is tiring of the nonstop combat and the damage to his reputation. He has told friends that he and his wife, Ivanka Trump, have made no long-term commitment to remain by Trump’s side, saying they would review every six months whether to return to private life in New York.

Kushner’s troubles are only one facet of the crisis. Reince Priebus, the White House chief of staff, and Steve Bannon, the president’s chief strategist, dropped off Trump’s trip early, in part to return to deal with the political furor over the Russia investigat­ions and the president’s decision to fire James Comey as FBI director.

The White House was trying to figure out how to respond to reports that Kushner had spoken in December with Russia’s ambassador, Sergey Kislyak, about establishi­ng a secret channel between his father-in-law’s transition team and Moscow to discuss the war in Syria and other issues. The Washington Post first reported on the suggestion Friday, and three people informed about it confirmed it to the New York Times.

The discussion took place at Trump Tower at a meeting that also included Michael Flynn, who served briefly as Trump’s national security adviser until being forced out when it was revealed that he had misled Vice President Mike Pence and others about a separate telephone conversati­on he had with Kislyak. It was unclear who first proposed the secret communicat­ions channel, but the idea was for Flynn to speak directly with a Russian military official. The channel was never set up.

Kushner has dismissed the attention on him as a reflection of his father-inlaw’s unconventi­onal approach to diplomacy and inexperien­ce in government, rather than anything of nefarious he has done.

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