The Day

Bannon rips GOP leaders in Congress

Trump’s former strategist says Republican­s aren’t loyal to president or being held accountabl­e

- By ASHLEY PARKER

Stephen Bannon — President Donald Trump’s former chief strategist who left the White House in August — declared war Sunday against the Republican congressio­nal leadership, called on Gary Cohn, Trump’s top economic adviser, to resign, and outlined his views on issues ranging from immigratio­n to trade.

Bannon, in a interview on CBS’s “60 Minutes,” accused Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell , R-Ky., and House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., of “trying to nullify the 2016 election.” It was Bannon’s first television interview since leaving the White House and returning as executive chairman to Breitbart News, the conservati­ve website he previously led.

He blamed them for failing to repeal and replace former President Barack Obama’s signature health-care law and made clear he would use his Breitbart perch to hold Republican­s accountabl­e for not helping Trump push through his agenda.

“They’re not going to help you unless they’re put on notice,” he told CBS’s Charlie Rose. “They’re going to be held accountabl­e if they do not support the president of the United States. Right now there’s no accountabi­lity.”

Stressing absolute loyalty to Trump, Bannon criticized members of the administra­tion who, he said, had leaked to the media their displeasur­e with the way Trump handled the white-supremacis­t-fueled violence in Charlottes­ville, Va., which left one dead and more injured.

“You can tell him, ‘Hey, maybe you can do it a better way.’ But if you’re going to break, then resign. If you’re going to break with him, resign,” he said. “If you find it unacceptab­le, you should resign.”

He explicitly mentioned Cohn, Trump’s director of the National Economic Council who had criticized Trump’s response in an interview, and said he “absolutely” thought Cohn should have resigned.

Bannon joined the Trump campaign in August 2016 and emerged as the president’s ideologica­l id, channeling his populist and nationalis­t impulses. Though he made many enemies within the West Wing, including the president’s son-in-law and senior adviser, Jared Kushner, and clashed with John Kelly, Trump’s second chief of staff, Bannon remains close to Trump.

Recalling a particular­ly low moment in the campaign, when the “Access Hollywood” tape emerged of Trump bragging about groping women, Bannon dismissed it as “just locker room talk” — but said the moment served as an important “litmus test” for loyalty to Trump.

At the time, Reince Priebus, Trump’s first chief of staff, urged the then-candidate to either drop out of the race or face a historic loss. And, Bannon said, Gov. Chris Christie, R-N.J., who served as a campaign adviser overseeing Trump’s transition plan, lost a likely spot in the president’s Cabinet because of his response to the video.

“I told him, ‘The plane leaves at 11 in the morning. If you’re on the plane, you’re on the team,’’’ Bannon said, referring to Christie. “Didn’t make the plane.”

On China, Bannon reiterated his calls for the United States to take a tougher stance over trade and appropriat­ing U.S. technology. “Donald Trump, for 30 years, has singled out China as the biggest single problem we have on the world stage,” he said. ‘The elites in this country have got us in a situation. We’re at not economic war with China; China is at economic war with us.”

And he also seemed to criticize the president’s recent decision to rescind protection­s for “Dreamers” — those 690,000 undocument­ed immigrants brought to the country as young children — while giving Congress six months to devise a legislativ­e solution. The move, he said, could cost Republican­s the House in the 2018 election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States