The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump delivers softer message at National Prayer Breakfast

Fresh crisis swirls over allegation­s against aide.

- Mark Landler

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump delivered a brief, uncharacte­ristically subdued message of faith and American values to religious leaders as a fresh crisis swirled in his White House, declaring on Thursday morning “we praise God for how truly blessed we are to be American.”

“Faith is central to American life and to liberty,” Trump said at the annual National Prayer Breakfast, a gathering of religious leaders who have become a keystone of his political base. “Our founders invoked the creator four times in the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce. Our currency declares, ‘In God we trust.’”

Trump’s remarks came amid growing questions about how the White House handled allegation­s of domestic violence against one of the president’s closest aides.

White House Chief of Staff John Kelly steadfastl­y defended the aide, Rob Porter, right up until Porter resigned Wednesday. Officials now say the White House was aware of the charges against Porter, which contribute­d to a delay in granting him a security clearance for his post as staff secretary.

Kelly, a retired Marine general, accompanie­d Trump to the breakfast but the president did not mention him. He did salute members of his Cabinet who were also

in attendance.

Trump’s remarks were most notable for what he did not say. He made no mention of his recent decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, a landmark shift in U.S. policy that was extremely popular with evangelica­l voters and a segment of hard-line pro-Israel American Jews.

Nor did he mention the Johnson Amendment, a law that prohibits churches and other tax-exempt organizati­ons from endorsing political candidates. Trump vowed to “totally destroy” the law in his first speech to the prayer breakfast last year, drawing enthusiast­ic applause.

While there was an attempt by Congress to repeal the Johnson Amendment as part of the $1.5 trillion tax cut, the provision did not make it into the final legislatio­n that Trump signed into law. Last May, Trump signed an executive order aimed at relaxing its restrictio­ns but it remains on the books.

On Thursday, Trump stuck to themes he sounded during his State of the Union address last week, including the successful military campaign against the Islamic State group and the human-rights abuses of North Korea.

Still, the president seemed entirely at ease with his audience. If anything, he has strengthen­ed his position with evangelica­ls in the last year, in part because of the Jerusalem decision. They have shown unshakable support for him, even after reports that one of his associates paid hush money to a porn star with whom Trump had an affair before he became president. Trump has denied the affair.

Trump’s appearance at the prayer breakfast was a stark contrast to last year, when he delivered a freewheeli­ng speech defending his immigratio­n policy, dismissing reports of hostile phone calls with foreign leaders and ridiculing Arnold Schwarzene­gger.

 ?? TOM BRENNER / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Donald Trump speaks during the National Prayer Breakfast at the Washington Hilton hotel in Washington on Thursday.
TOM BRENNER / THE NEW YORK TIMES President Donald Trump speaks during the National Prayer Breakfast at the Washington Hilton hotel in Washington on Thursday.

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