The Denver Post

Trump tweet decries lack of “Due Process”

- By Jonathan Lemire

WASHINGTON» President Donald Trump on Saturday seemed to frame the downfall of a pivotal aide accused of abusing his wives as a character assassinat­ion, adding to the tumult that has engulfed the White House, splintered the staff and imperiled chief of staff John Kelly’s hold on his position.

Trump vented in a tweet that appeared to take aim at the rising #Metoo movement about sexual abuse and echoed his own denials of sexual impropriet­y in the face of accusation­s from more than a

dozen women.

“Peoples lives are being shattered and destroyed by a mere allegation,” Trump wrote. “Some are true and some are false. Some are old and some are new. There is no recovery for someone falsely accused — life and career are gone. Is there no such thing any longer as Due Process?”

His response also reflected his growing discontent with Kelly, once hailed for bringing discipline to the West Wing but recently at the center of his own controvers­ies.

The president has fumed that Kelly was too slow in bringing the allegation­s against staff secretary Rob Porter to his attention. That has added to Trump’s frustratio­ns about the chief of staff’s attempts to control him and Kelly’s recent inflammato­ry comments about immigrants, according to two people who speak to the president regularly but are not authorized to publicly discuss private conversati­ons.

The two strong-willed men have clashed and Trump has begun floating possible names for a future chief of staff in conversati­ons with outside advisers, according to three people with knowledge of the conversati­ons. Among the names being considered: Budget Director Mick Mulvaney, House Majority Leader Kevin Mccarthy, Rep. Mark Meadows and CIA Director Mike Pompeo.

But there was no sign that a move was imminent, according to the people with knowledge of the conversati­ons. Trump is known to frequently poll his advisers about the performanc­e of senior staff and is often reluctant to actually fire aides.

As the aftershock­s of the accusation­s against Porter reverberat­ed for a fifth day, Trump stayed out of sight on a rainy Saturday in Washington and tweeted along while watching Fox News shows.

Most West Wing offices remained dark.

Kelly has indicated he would step aside if he lost the faith of the president. But he has not offered to resign, according to a White House official who was not authorized to discuss personnel matters publicly and spoke Friday on condition of anonymity.

But Kelly’s hold on his post seemed the shakiest since he took the job in July, in part because several West Wing aides have had their faith shaken by his handling of the Porter accusation­s. At a senior staff meeting Friday, Kelly tried to push his own timeline concerning Porter. Some aides in that meeting privately questioned Kelly’s account, thinking his version of events was self-serving, according to one official with knowledge of the meeting but not authorized to discuss it publicly.

Kelly has said he found out only Tuesday night that the accusation­s against Porter were true and he was gone immediatel­y. That clashes with the events of Tuesday night, when the White House released a statement of support for Porter from Kelly, who had initially urged his right-hand-man to remain in his post. The chief of staff said Friday that the decision was made before photos of one of Porter’s ex-wives with a black eye were published.

Other White House officials have said it was the release of the photos Wednesday morning that sealed Porter’s fate. The staff secretary resigned later Wednesday.

On Friday, a second White House staffer, speechwrit­er David Sorensen, resigned as a result of abuse allegation­s. Sorensen worked for the Council on Environmen­tal Quality, which is part of the Executive Office of the President.

Many White House senior staff members remained stunned by the accusation­s against Porter, a well-liked and seemingly mild-mannered graduate of Harvard and Oxford.

When the allegation­s first emerged against Porter, who downplayed the claims from two ex-wives, a number of senior aides rallied around him, and the White House acknowledg­ed that personal relationsh­ips may have played a role in their response.

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