Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Reported book draws fury

Steve Bannon is persona non grata, Trump says.

- By Noah Bierman and Brian Bennett Washington Bureau Times staff writer Chris Megerian contribute­d.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump declared his former chief strategist Steve Bannon persona non grata Wednesday, delivering a scorching rebuke to the man who had been Trump’s most visible partner in his efforts to redefine the Republican Party according to their populist and nationalis­t vision.

“Steve Bannon has nothing to do with me or my Presidency,” Trump said in a caustic four-paragraph statement released by the White House. “When he was fired, he not only lost his job, he lost his mind.”

Trump rarely dispatches his advisers entirely, whether he fires them or they are disgraced. Bannon had tested that in recent months, however, with reported comments mocking both Trump and his children and raising Bannon’s own profile as a master strategist and political theorist.

The president’s public denunciati­on of Bannon came after a report early Wednesday, based on excerpts from a forthcomin­g book, that quoted Bannon condemning as “treasonous” a June 2016 meeting in which Donald Trump Jr. and Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law, met with Kremlin-linked Russians to get “dirt” on Hillary Clinton.

“Even if you thought that this was not treasonous, or unpatrioti­c, or bad ... and I happen to think it’s all of that, you should have called the FBI immediatel­y,” Bannon reportedly said.

His verdict on the meeting in Trump Tower — an event now at the center of a special counsel’s criminal investigat­ion of Russian election meddling and any Trump campaign complicity — was taken from a book by journalist Michael Wolff to be released next week and obtained before publicatio­n by The Guardian. Bannon’s reported comment is especially damning, undercutti­ng Trump’s claim that the Russia story is a Democratic Partypushe­d hoax.

Other portions of the book, as reported by The Guardian and excerpted in New York magazine, quote other Trump aides and portray him as ill-informed, unprepared and ill-tempered and contend that neither Trump nor family members and associates expected him to win. In a separate statement, the spokeswoma­n for first lady Melania Trump denied a claim that “Melania was in tears — and not of joy.”

Bannon, who led Trump’s campaign through much of the general election season and was the senior White House counselor for seven months, has long used thewebsite he runs, Breitbart News, to wage war on mainstream Republican­s and party leaders while giving voice to white nationalis­ts. After his firing in August, Bannon sounded a fresh declaratio­n of intra-party war, vowing to support challenger­s to Republican lawmakers insufficie­ntly supportive of Trump’s protection­ist and immigratio­n policies.

But even as he rankled many Trump allies and GOP congressio­nal leaders, Bannon enjoyed a continued relationsh­ip with Trump, who praised him publicly and sought his advice. When Bannon left the White House, Trump thanked him for his service with a Tweet.

Trump’s disowning of Bannon immediatel­y cheered mainstream Republican­s. A political group tied to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who has long been a Bannon target, summed up its glee in a Twitter message that had no words, just a short video of McConnell grinning.

Trump Jr. and Anthony Scaramucci, another banished Trump official, who’d conflicted with Bannon, shared their joy on Twitter. Both cited profanity-laced comments that Scaramucci made about Bannon in an interview with the New Yorker magazine in July, accusing Bannon of trying to build his own brand off “the strength of the president.”

Trump’s oldest son also tweeted that Bannon had turned the opportunit­y of working in the White House “into a nightmare of backstabbi­ng, harassing, leaking, lying & underminin­g the President. Steve is not a strategist, he is an opportunis­t.”

The president apparently reached the same conclusion. In his statement he dismissed Bannon as “a staffer who worked for me after I had already won the nomination.”

“Now that he is on his own, Steve is learning that winning isn’t as easy as I make it look,” Trump said.

Trump blamed Bannon for leaking to the media while in the White House and for losing an Alabama Senate seat in last month’s special election.

Bannon backed Roy Moore, who defeated an incumbent Republican senator that Trump supported. Bannon campaigned for Moore both in Alabama and through Breitbart, sending reporters to the state in a failed effort to discredit reports in The Washington Post that Moore had molested a 14-year-old girl decades ago and made advances on others. Trump, at Bannon’s urging, endorsed Moore in the general-election race against Democrat Doug Jones.

Bannon is expected to testify soon in a closed hearing of the House Intelligen­ce Committee and will be questioned about what he knew, if anything, about ties between Trump associates and Russian officials.

The June 2016 meeting in Trump Tower occurred before Bannon officially joined the campaign. He didn’t object entirely to the meeting taking place, he reportedly recounted in the book, but said it should have been handled by lawyers and held far from Trump Tower. Any dirt on Clinton should have been passed, he said, “to Breitbart or something like that, or maybe some other more legitimate publicatio­n.”

Attorneys for Trump Jr. and Kushner did not respond to emails requesting comment.

Bannon’s denigratio­n of Trump and his family represents yet another unusual twist to the Trump presidency.

Though other presidents’ aides have, on occasions, written tell-all books or given indiscreet interviews, they have rarely done it with such gusto and abandon. A profile in Vanity Fair last month reported that Bannon had told a friend that Trump was “like an 11-year-old child,” and that he recalled allegation­s in a dropped lawsuit that Trump had raped a California teenager.

“Bannon has his own platform, unlike most chiefs of staff or advisers who seek to be part of convention­al politics,” said Henry Olsen, a conservati­ve author.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? White House aide Steve Bannon listens as President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting on cybersecur­ity in January 2017. Despite Bannon’s role, Trump fired him in August.
EVAN VUCCI/AP White House aide Steve Bannon listens as President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting on cybersecur­ity in January 2017. Despite Bannon’s role, Trump fired him in August.

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