National Post

Trump’s persona warped by trauma at home, niece writes

Domineerin­g father called sociopath

- Shane harris and Michael Kranish

A tell-all book by President donald Trump’s niece describes a family riven by a series of traumas, exacerbate­d by a daunting patriarch who “destroyed” donald Trump by short-circuiting his “ability to develop and experience the entire spectrum of human emotion,” according to a copy of the forthcomin­g memoir obtained by The Washington Post.

President Trump’s view of the world was shaped by his desire during childhood to avoid his father’s disapprova­l, according to the niece, Mary Trump, whose book is by turns a family history and a psychologi­cal analysis of her uncle.

Mary’s father, Fred Jr. — the president’s older brother — died of an alcohol-related illness when she was 16 years old in 1981.

President Trump told The Washington Post last year that he and his father both pushed Fred Jr. to try to go into the family business, which Trump said he now regrets.

donald escaped his father’s scorn and ridicule, Mary Trump wrote, because “his personalit­y served his father’s purpose. That’s what sociopaths do: they co-opt others and use them toward their own ends — ruthlessly and efficientl­y, with no tolerance for dissent or resistance.”

The president, she wrote, is a product of his domineerin­g father and was acutely aware of avoiding the scorn that he heaped on his older brother, called Freddy, Trump writes. “By limiting donald’s access to his own feelings and rendering many of them unacceptab­le, Fred perverted his son’s perception of the world and damaged his ability to live in it.”

Mary Trump wrote that her grandfathe­r’s children routinely lied to him but for different reasons. For her father, “lying was defensive — not simply a way to circumvent his father’s disapprova­l or to avoid punishment, as it was for the others, but a way to survive.”

For her uncle donald, however, “lying was primarily a mode of self-aggrandize­ment meant to convince other people he was better than he actually was,” Trump writes.

Mary wrote that her father had a “natural sense of humour, sense of adventure, and sensitivit­y,” which he worked hard to hide from the family patriarch.

“Softness was unthinkabl­e in his namesake,” she writes.

donald, seven-and-ahalf years younger than his brother, “had plenty of time to learn from watching Fred humiliate” his eldest son, Mary Trump wrote.

“The lesson he learned, at its simplest, was that it was wrong to be like Freddy: Fred didn’t respect his oldest son, so neither would donald.”

The book, Too Much and Never enough: How My Family Created the World’s Most dangerous Man, became an instant bestseller based on advance orders, underscori­ng the intense interest among the public about the forces that shaped the man who became president.

Mary Trump, 55, who has a doctoral degree in clinical psychology, shares a history of family tragedy and division with President Trump. In 1981, when she was 16 years old, her father Fred Jr. — the president’s older brother — died of an alcohol-related disease. Friends of her father told The Washington Post last year that they questioned whether donald and other members of the family bore some responsibi­lity for Fred Jr.’s decline.

President Trump, who rarely admits mistakes, told The Post in an interview last year that he regrets the way he and his father pressured his brother to go into the family business instead of encouragin­g him to continue with the dream of becoming a commercial airline pilot.

“I do regret having put pressure on him,” Trump said. Running the family business “was just something he was never going to want” to do.

After her father died, the Trump family agreed to help support Mary and her brother Fred III.

But when Mary’s grandfathe­r Fred Sr. died in 1999, she and her brother did not get the inheritanc­e they expected, a sum that might have equalled the amount that would have gone to their father, if he had lived. Mary and Fred contested Fred Sr.’s will, contending that one or more people connected to the Trump family coerced him to change it and give them less money.

Fred and Mary eventually reached a settlement with donald and his siblings, receiving an undisclose­d amount and signing a confidenti­ality agreement. President Trump’s younger brother, Robert, filed a petition in New york Supreme Court seeking to stop publicatio­n on grounds that she had agreed not to publish an account of the family. But the court’s appellate division ruled last week that the publisher, Simon & Schuster, was not a party to that agreement and lifted a temporary restrainin­g order against it.

As donald Trump announced his candidacy in 2015, Mary Trump does not appear to have said anything publicly about him. But when it became clear that her uncle had won the presidency, she took to Twitter. “Worst night of my life,” she wrote at least 12 times in tweets that have been deleted recently. She wrote that “We should be judged harshly . ... I grieve for our country.”

The publisher said it had already shipped thousands of copies, and it moved the publicatio­n to July 14, two weeks ahead of the original schedule. Mary Trump has sought to lift the temporary restrainin­g order against her, a decision on that could come within days.

 ?? TIME LIFE PICTURES / DMI / THE LIFE PICTURE COLLECTION VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Donald Trump, centre, in 1988 with his wife at the time, Ivana, and young son Donald Jr., chats with his father Fred Trump at a Mike Tyson-michael Spinks pre-fight party.
TIME LIFE PICTURES / DMI / THE LIFE PICTURE COLLECTION VIA GETTY IMAGES Donald Trump, centre, in 1988 with his wife at the time, Ivana, and young son Donald Jr., chats with his father Fred Trump at a Mike Tyson-michael Spinks pre-fight party.

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