Medicine Hat News

Trump White House sees ‘deep state’ behind leaks, opposition

-

NEW YORK The White House and its allies are stepping up their attacks on a foe typically associated with fragile democracie­s, military coups and spy thrillers.

The “deep state,” an alleged shadowy network of powerful entrenched federal and military interests, has increasing­ly become the focus of Republican­s who accuse such forces of trying to undermine the new president.

Though senior White House staff members don’t use the exact label, the notion behind it has taken hold. President Donald Trump claims his predecesso­r tapped his phone and America’s intelligen­ce agencies have conspired to leak harmful informatio­n to embarrass him. His chief strategist has vowed to dismantle the permanent Washington “administra­tive state.” White House spokesman Sean Spicer says “people that burrowed into government” are trying to sabotage the president.

To Trump’s critics, these assertions come off as paranoid fear of a non-existent shadow government and an effort to create a scapegoat for the White House’s struggles. But to Trump’s supporters, this represents an overdue challenge to an elite ruling class concerned only with maintainin­g its own grasp on power.

“Of course, the deep state exists. There’s a permanent state of massive bureaucrac­ies that do whatever they want and set up deliberate leaks to attack the president,” said Newt Gingrich, a Trump confidant. “This is what the deep state does: They create a lie, spread a lie, fail to check the lie and then deny that they were behind the lie.”

Historians believe the concept of the “deep state” comes from Turkey, where the term “derin devlet” meant a clandestin­e network, including intelligen­ce and military officers, which protected the ruling class in the 1920s. Similar ideas have taken hold in Egypt, where the military has allied itself with powerful business interests, and Pakistan, with its robust intelligen­ce service.

In its current use, the concept has been twisted and broadened, encompassi­ng a resistant bureaucrac­y and a regulatory regime rather than foreshadow­ing some sort of military interventi­on. Chief Trump strategist Steve Bannon has offered the loudest warnings about the opposition the president is facing from the deep state.

In his only public speech since the election, Bannon told a conservati­ve group that the White House’s goal was the “deconstruc­tion of the administra­tive state,” a reflection of his belief that the massive federal government, with its burdensome regulation­s, does more to hinder than uplift citizens. It also echoes Bannon’s oftstated worldview, frequently on display at his former news site Breitbart, that a global power structure — including government institutio­ns — has rigged the economy.

 ?? Donald Trump ??
Donald Trump

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada