Ottawa Citizen

BANNON JOINS LIST OF BANISHED

Trump gets rid of chief strategist

- JONATHAN LEMIRE AND JILL COLVIN

WASHINGTON • Steve Bannon, the blunt-spoken and divisive strategist who rose from Donald Trump’s conservati­ve campaign to a top White House post, was pushed out by the president Friday, capping a turbulent seven months that now has seen the departure of much of his senior staff.

The former leader of conservati­ve Breitbart News and a favourite in the farther-right portions of the Republican Party, Bannon has prodded Trump to follow through on some of his most contentiou­s campaign promises including his travel ban for some foreigners and his decision to pull out of the Paris climate change agreement.

Just seven months in, Trump has forced out his hardline national security adviser, his chief of staff, his press secretary (whose last day will be Aug. 31) and two communicat­ions directors — in addition to the FBI director he inherited from Barack Obama.

Bannon’s departure is especially significan­t since he was viewed by many as Trump’s connection to his base of most-committed voters and the protector of the disruptive, conservati­ve agenda that propelled the 63-year-old celebrity businessma­n to the White House.

“It’s a tough pill to swallow if Steve is gone because you have a Republican West Wing that’s filled with generals and Democrats,” said former campaign strategist Sam Nunberg, shortly before the news of Bannon’s departure broke. “It would feel like the twilight zone.”

From Breitbart, there was a dramatic one-word warning.

“#WAR,” tweeted Joel B. Pollak, a senior editor at large at the news site.

Indeed, Bannon’s nationalis­tic, outsider conservati­sm served as a guiding force for Trump’s rise to office.

Without him, Trump’s agenda is left in the hands of more moderate advisers, including his son-in-law, his daughter and his economic adviser whom Bannon has slammed as “globalist.”

On the other hand, some at the White House have suggested his influence was often exaggerate­d — perhaps as a result of behindthe-scenes self-promotion.

Trump spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Bannon and Chief of Staff John Kelly, only recently installed himself, had agreed that Friday would be Bannon’s last day.

“We are grateful for his service and wish him the best,” she said in the only statement from the White House.

A combative and unorthodox Republican, Bannon was a key adviser in Trump’s general election campaign, but he has been a contentiou­s presence in a White House divided by warring staff loyalties. He repeatedly clashed with other top advisers, most notably Trump’s son-inlaw, Jared Kushner, and has drawn the ire of the president himself.

One person close to Bannon said he had offered his resignatio­n to Trump on Aug. 7. It was to go into effect a week later, the oneyear anniversar­y of when he officially joined Trump’s presidenti­al campaign. But the departure was delayed after the violence in Charlottes­ville, Va., said the person, who spoke only on condition of anonymity.

In fact, Bannon has been on shaky ground for weeks, and his job appeared in jeopardy when Kelly announced he’d be embarking on a personnel review of West Wing staff.

Though Bannon had adopted a lower profile in recent weeks, he again became a flashpoint following criticism from the right of National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster, which some blamed on him.

Then this week, The American Prospect posted an interview in which he contradict­ed Trump by saying there was no military solution to the threat posed by North Korea and its nuclear ambitions. Just last week, Trump pledged to answer North Korean aggression with “fire and fury.”

Bannon also told the liberal publicatio­n that the U.S. is losing the economic race against China and talked about purging his rivals from the Defence and State department­s, as though he were in charge.

Bannon is the latest in a line of departures that includes former chief of staff Reince Priebus, former press secretary Sean Spicer (though he is still temporaril­y working at the White House), former national security adviser Michael Flynn and former communicat­ions director Anthony Scaramucci, whose tenure lasted little more than a week.

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 ?? MANDEL NGAN / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? Without chief strategist Steve Bannon in the White House, U.S. President Donald Trump’s agenda is left in the hands of more moderate advisers, including his daughter, Ivanka Trump, and son-in-law, Jared Kushner.
MANDEL NGAN / AFP / GETTY IMAGES Without chief strategist Steve Bannon in the White House, U.S. President Donald Trump’s agenda is left in the hands of more moderate advisers, including his daughter, Ivanka Trump, and son-in-law, Jared Kushner.

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