USA TODAY US Edition

Trump doesn’t spare loyalists

Defying political norms got him to the White House, but his brash methods haven’t helped him lately

- Susan Page @susanpage USA TODAY

President Trump’s greatest political asset is also turning out to be his most damaging governing liability: After six months on the job, he hasn’t changed.

Trump is still the disruptor who defied the Republican establishm­ent and the chattering class by winning the GOP nomination, then the White House against all odds. Having few traditiona­l allies to rely on, candidate Trump won by waging unapologet­ic attacks on political norms and niceties.

But to get anything done in office, President Trump needs friends.

Now he has lashed out at one of his few original loyalists, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the first senator to endorse his presidenti­al bid and a regular surrogate on the campaign trail last year. Trump blasted Sessions on Wednesday for his decision to recuse himself from the investigat­ion into possible Russian interferen­ce in the presidenti­al election, a step that enabled and contribute­d to the decision by Sessions’ deputy to appoint a special counsel in the case.

“Well, Sessions should have never recused himself, and if he was going to recuse himself, he should have told me before he took the job,” Trump com-

To get anything done in office, President Trump needs friends.

plained in an interview with The

New York Times. “And I would have picked somebody else.”

The president also castigated Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein — “who is from Baltimore; there are very few Republican­s in Baltimore, if any” — and special counsel Robert Mueller, a former director of the FBI. The president warned Mueller not to expand his inquiry into Trump family finances unrelated to Russia. “That’s a violation,” he said, refusing to answer when asked whether he might fire Mueller if the counsel did extend the inquiry.

Sessions and Rosenstein declined to defend themselves — or Charm City, for that matter — in measured responses.

They appeared at a Justice Department news conference Thursday that was called to announce the takedown of an Internet marketplac­e for drugs, weapons and other illicit items. Trump’s overnight remarks dominated the session instead.

“I have the honor of serving as attorney general,” Sessions said. “We love this job. We love this department. And I plan to continue to do so as long as that is appropriat­e.”

“We’re working here every day to advance the priorities of the Department of Justice,” Rosenstein said. “I was proud to be here yesterday; I’m proud to be here today, and I’ll be proud to be here tomorrow.” FIRING BACKFIRE

Though the president has the legal authority to fire the officials he appoints, it’s hard to overstate the political conflagrat­ion that would erupt if he ousted Sessions or Rosenstein, or if he ordered the Justice Department to oust Mueller. His decision to fire FBI Director James Comey created a firestorm of its own and fueled allegation­s of obstructio­n of justice.

His willingnes­s to denigrate one of his staunchest supporters — someone who as an Alabama senator stood up for Trump when none of his colleagues was willing to do so — could have repercussi­ons on his efforts to persuade members of Congress to support his proposals to pass a budget, overhaul health care, cut taxes, invest in infrastruc­ture and more.

That’s a point Senate Democratic leader Charles Schumer was quick to make on Twitter.

“Two words to @SenateGOP when @realDonald­Trump says ‘I’ll have your back’ when you vote to repeal health care,” Schumer posted. “Jeff Sessions.”

The president didn’t mention Sessions’ efforts to pursue other administra­tion priorities, from cracking down on so-called sanctuary cities that shelter undocument­ed immigrants to defending the Trump immigratio­n ban in the courts. The Justice Department unveiled major indictment­s against health care fraud last week and progress against the Dark Web on Thursday, an announceme­nt that might have garnered attention on another day.

Instead, the president cast Sessions’ job performanc­e entirely in terms of his loyalty to Trump, and every question at the news conference centered on that.

At the midpoint of his first year in office, Trump bragged about his achievemen­ts.

“I think I’ve done more than anyone else,” he said, referring to the record of his predecesso­rs during their first six months. “So the bottom line is this: The country’s doing well. ... We are moving forward with a lot of good things. The unemployme­nt is the lowest it’s been in 16 years. The stock market is the highest it’s ever been. It’s up almost 20% since I took office. And we’re working hard on health care.”

Trump is also enmeshed in Russia investigat­ions by the Justice Department and five congressio­nal committees that have created a darkening cloud over his White House, and he has yet to pass a single major legislativ­e initiative. He has run headlong into the separation of powers that gives Congress and the courts the ability to thwart his plans. SET IN HIS WAYS

His approval-disapprova­l rating Thursday in the rolling threeday Gallup Poll was 36%-59%. That’s by far the worst of any modern president at six months. But the voters who elected him have mostly stuck with him. Nearly nine of 10 Trump voters said in a Reuters/Ipsos poll released Thursday that they would vote for him again.

What he hasn’t done is win over the voters who didn’t support him or reassure them that he has the temperamen­t and character a president needs.

“I think it’s clear that Trump’s unconventi­onal style, willingnes­s to defy convention and to say things normal politician­s don’t say helped convince voters in last year’s campaign to vote for him,” Frank Newport, editor-in-chief of the Gallup Poll, wrote in an analysis of Trump’s comparativ­e standing. “Many may have thought he would change his ways once he entered the Oval Office.”

For better or worse, he hasn’t.

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 ?? ANDREW HARNIK, AP ?? President Trump has blistered Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, left, and Attorney General Jeff Sessions.
ANDREW HARNIK, AP President Trump has blistered Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, left, and Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

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