Houston Chronicle

‘The General’ commands White House, but he’s been unable to control Trump

- By Margaret Talev and Jennifer Jacobs

WASHINGTON — Since retired Marine Corps General John Kelly started as White House chief of staff last month, President Donald Trump has added a routine caveat before approving proposals advisers place before him: Check with “The General” before moving ahead.

It’s a marked departure from Trump’s instinct to manage around Kelly’s predecesso­r, Reince Priebus. When making a decision, one aide recalls, Trump often would caution, “Don’t tell Reince.”

Trump’s appointmen­t of Kelly has imposed new order on a White House that had been riven with infighting among warring camps. But it hasn’t been the political lifeline Republican allies had hoped for, as Kelly has so far been unable to perform one of the chief of staff ’s most basic duties: to stop a president from following his worst instincts.

Limits on his influence

Trump’s controvers­ial initial response to the violence in Charlottes­ville, compounded by an off-the-cuff news conference days later and then defended again in a divisive, revisionis­t speech Tuesday in Phoenix, have laid bare the limits of Kelly’s ability to manage his boss.

This month may be the most politicall­y damaging so far of Trump’s presidency, as the legitimacy he appeared to confer on white supremacis­ts alienated allies in corporate America and antagonize­d Republican lawmakers. The ultimatum Trump issued Tuesday that he would shut down the federal government unless his fellow Republican­s who control Congress pay for the border wall he promised compounds the challenges for Kelly ahead of the Sept. 30 funding deadline.

The respect aides say Trump has for Kelly, a decorated general, hasn’t yet translated into deference when the president’s passions run high.

In interviews with 14 current and former administra­tion officials, congressio­nal Republican­s and people close to Trump and Kelly, most credited Kelly with imposing new processes and restrictio­ns that have limited freelancin­g, drama, leaking and backbiting among staff. Kelly has strengthen­ed chains of command and given Trump fewer distractio­ns, clearing the path to execute decisions from Stephen Bannon’s departure to Afghanista­n policy.

Kelly has implored Trump repeatedly to stay on script, emphasizin­g the importance of being precise and sensitive to the constituen­cies hearing his words. The president did stick to the text in his speech Monday night on his approach to Afghanista­n. Beforehand, Kelly had emphasized the magnitude and somber nature of sending more young men and women into war.

“Gen. Kelly is an important voice in the administra­tion and a straight shooter,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican whose own tensions with Trump have been well documented, said in a statement. “He’s been invaluable to the country throughout his career,” McConnell said of Kelly, “and I appreciate him stepping up to serve in his new role.”

One former Trump aide described a “Hunger Games” environmen­t before Kelly came to the White House, between staff leaks and “insiders” selling access with claims of closeness to the president. “It’s known those days are over,” the aide said. “Everyone, including staff, knows it’s a new day of structure and knows not to mess with Kelly.”

Yet Trump still veers off message, from the response to the Virginia violence to social-media attacks on key members of his own party. His targets this month have included McConnell and Sens. Jeff Flake and Lindsey Graham.

‘Only thing saving America’

Three current and former Trump aides, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said Kelly hasn’t made a real dent on improving how Trump is viewed by the public, or in controllin­g negative news.

Another said that from the start of the presidency, Trump has been able to undo progress on executive orders or relationsh­ip building with Congress with a single tweet or an off-the-cuff remark, and that nothing has changed with Kelly’s arrival except that with the departures of Priebus and Bannon, Trump now lacks people in the room who have the political instincts to channel the establishm­ent or the base.

One senior Republican congressio­nal aide who is in regular contact with the White House said there is more confidence among lawmakers now that Kelly is communicat­ing their concerns in unvarnishe­d terms to the president.

Another Senate Republican aide added, “Kelly is the only thing saving America right now.”

 ?? Cherisa May / Sipa USA / Tribune News Service ?? John Kelly, White House chief of staff for President Donald Trump, attends a Medal of Honor ceremony for former Spc. 5 James McCloughan last month. Kelly has imposed new order on the White House.
Cherisa May / Sipa USA / Tribune News Service John Kelly, White House chief of staff for President Donald Trump, attends a Medal of Honor ceremony for former Spc. 5 James McCloughan last month. Kelly has imposed new order on the White House.

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