The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

A ‘presidenti­al’ Trump 2.0? Not so fast

- By Jill Colvin and Julie Pace

Standing in a conference room at a swanky South Florida hotel, Donald Trump’s chief adviser assured Republican insiders his boss was ready to tone down his over-thetop persona.

He’s been “projecting an image,” Paul Manafort told the GOP officials. “The part that he’s been playing is now evolving.”

But two hours later, Trump was telling the crowd at a rambunctio­us rally in Pennsylvan­ia that he wasn’t ready to change.

“I just don’t know if I want to do it yet,” Trump said Thursday as supporters roared with approval. Ever the entertaine­r, he said that acting more presidenti­al would leave his audiences “bored,” and that instead of drawing thousands, “I’ll have 150 people.”

The comments by Trump and new aide Manafort underscore a central tension surging through the Republican front-runner’s campaign. Even as he builds a more profession­al operation, the billionair­e businessma­n appears — at least for now — unable or unwilling to dial back the free-wheeling brashness that has both energized his millions of supporters and turned off millions of other Americans.

There have been previous promises that a more “presidenti­al” Trump was about to emerge, as well as descriptio­ns from supporters who insist there’s a charming, down-to-earth side of the real estate mogul that surfaces in private. Trump has shown flashes of what the “other Trump” might look like, but quickly reverted to his familiar campaign self.

The latest talk from Manafort comes at a crucial moment in Trump’s campaign, as he seeks to unite the Republican Party behind his candidacy and hold off efforts to potentiall­y snatch the nomination away if the race goes to a contested national convention. Many in the party fear Trump is viewed so unfavorabl­y by a wide swath of Americans that he would not only keep Republican­s out of the White House but also damage GOP candidates running for other offices and perhaps even cause irreparabl­e damage to the party.

South Carolina GOP chairman Matt Moore attended Manafort’s presentati­on in Florida, and emerged confident that Trump was prepared to make necessary changes.

“He has an opportunit­y to reinvent himself as a more presidenti­al frontrunne­r for the party. And I hope he does that,” Moore said.

But Trump’s critics, including rival Ted Cruz, tried to use Manafort’s assertion that he has simply been “playing a part” as an opportunit­y to undercut the front-runner’s core strength: that he’s authentic to a fault and says what he believes, regardless of the political repercussi­ons.

Speaking to reporters after an event in Williamspo­rt, Pennsylvan­ia, Friday, Cruz said Trump’s advisers had “gone down and told Republican Party bosses that everything Donald has said on the campaign is just a show, he doesn’t believe any of it.”

If there’s an abrupt change, some supporters might feel the same way.

“If he suddenly changed, it would be really disappoint­ing,” said Irene Mallabar, 67, a retired antique dealer from Milford, Delaware. “That’s not who he is,” she said at a Trump rally at the State Fairground­s in Harrington. “It wouldn’t feel real. Or maybe we wouldn’t know what was real.”

Cruz trails Trump in the delegate count, but is banking on being able to keep the front-runner from reaching the 1,237 delegates he needs to secure the nomination. That would push the GOP race toward a contested convention.

Trump wants to avoid a complicate­d floor fight, and top aides are promising a more traditiona­l campaign — and candidate — to try to persuade party leaders to stick with him even he’s just shy of the delegates he needs.

Trump has hired a handful of more experience­d advisers, including Manafort. The notoriousl­y thrifty billionair­e is also plunging $2 million into television advertisin­g in Pennsylvan­ia and Indiana, states that hold primary contests over the next two weeks. One traditiona­l-looking spot features Trump talking directly into the camera about his policy proposals. The other appears aimed at softening his image, presenting him as a father and grandfathe­r.

Next Wednesday, Trump will deliver a formal address on foreign affairs, the first in a long-promised series of a policy speeches meant to infuse his campaign with a degree of seriousnes­s. But underscori­ng the push-and-pull between Trump and advisers who want him to assume a more presidenti­al aura, it’s taken months of cajoling to get that first speech on the books.

Even as recently as Tuesday, campaign manager Corey Lewandowsk­i — whose responsibi­lities have been curtailed since Manafort’s hiring — was questionin­g the necessity of policy speeches, saying that’s not what voters care most about.

“I don’t think the voters really have as much concern, but I know you guys are dying for one,” he told reporters.

Darrell Scott, the CEO of Trump’s new National Diversity Coalition, is among those says there’s a gracious, humble private man beneath the brash exterior. That’s “the Trump I’ve always known,” Scott said.

“Trump has to make the transition from public figure to public servant,” he added. “He’s growing into this role.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump arrives at a rally Thursday at the Pennsylvan­ia Farm Show Complex and Expo Center in Harrisburg.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump arrives at a rally Thursday at the Pennsylvan­ia Farm Show Complex and Expo Center in Harrisburg.

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