Los Angeles Times

Senator has a blunt reply for Trump

Tennessee Republican Bob Corker calls the White House ‘an adult day-care center.’

- By Laura King laura.king@latimes.com

Tennessee Republican Bob Corker publicly calls the White House “an adult day-care center.”

WASHINGTON — A senior Republican senator publicly expressed on Sunday what party leaders mostly have whispered, calling the White House “an adult daycare center” in a caustic reply to President Trump’s weekend of tweets and offthe-cuff comments attacking the senator and a range of other targets.

The extraordin­ary Twitter exchange between the president and Sen. Bob Corker of Tennessee captured the degree of disruption that Trump has brought to the Republican Party he now heads. And it put his agenda perhaps further at risk in a Senate where Republican­s have just a two-vote margin of control, as they gird for battle over signature issues such as tax reform.

The episode also served to advance the narrative of a White House in disarray — the very subject that Corker earlier in the week had alluded to, seemingly setting off the president — even as administra­tion officials sought anew to tamp down that notion.

Trump took the first shot, in a series of tweets before he left the White House for his golf club in Virginia.

“Didn’t have the guts to run!” Trump said of Corker, who announced last month he would not seek reelection. Trump claimed that the Tennessee Republican, who has been in the Senate since 2007, had “begged” for his endorsemen­t before dropping out of the race.

“He also wanted to be Secretary of State,” the president wrote. “I said ‘NO THANKS.’ ”

Trump castigated Corker, who is the widely respected chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, as “largely responsibl­e for the horrendous Iran Deal,” referring to the landmark 2015 accord between Tehran and six world powers, including the United States, to block Iran’s nuclear arms developmen­t.

The president, who vowed to abandon the deal as a candidate, is expected in the coming week to decertify the pact, putting the onus on Congress to decide whether to reimpose sanctions.

In what could be something of a self-fulfilling prophecy, Trump said he expected Corker to be a “negative voice and stand in the way of our great agenda.”

It was perhaps the most incendiary of a weekend of eye-catching presidenti­al fulminatio­ns about North Korea, Democrats, disgraced movie mogul Harvey Weinstein and profession­al football players. Corker’s response was short and stunningly sharp, comparing the White House to facilities for people with dementia.

“It’s a shame the White House has become an adult day-care center,” he wrote. “Someone obviously missed their shift this morning.”

With striking bluntness, Corker gave voice to many Republican colleagues in Congress who are vexed by Trump’s penchant for Twitter outbursts punctuatin­g the early morning, late night and weekends; often they are called upon to respond, by the media and constituen­ts. More broadly, many question in private — as Corker has publicly — the president’s fitness for office.

Corker’s chief of staff, Todd Womack, issued a statement contesting factual elements of Trump’s tweets. Womack said the president sought to dissuade the senator — a campaign supporter and, early on, a formidable legislativ­e ally — from retiring, and volunteere­d more than once that he would endorse the senator.

The discord between the two men flared into the open last week, when Corker praised several of Trump’s senior advisors for helping to stave off “chaos.” He made it clear that he meant chaos caused by the president — not, as White House aides later suggested, general global chaos.

“I think Secretary Tillerson, Secretary Mattis and Chief of Staff Kelly are those people that help separate our country from chaos,” the senator said Wednesday, referring to Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Defense Secretary James N. Mattis and White House Chief of Staff John F. Kelly.

Even before announcing that he did not intend to run in 2018, the senator had expressed distinct reservatio­ns about Trump.

In August, after Trump said that white supremacis­ts and neo-Nazis in Charlottes­ville, Va., were no more to blame for deadly violence there than counter-protesters, Corker said Trump “has not yet been able to demonstrat­e the stability nor some of the competence that he needs to demonstrat­e in order to be successful.”

Trump has previously tangled with other senior Republican senators, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and John McCain of Arizona.

His recent defeat on healthcare, for which Trump blames McCain, puts even more importance on the president’s proposed tax overhaul. Yet Corker recently served notice that he will not back a tax plan that adds one penny to federal deficits, after the White House and congressio­nal Republican leaders agreed the tax cuts could add up to $1.5 trillion over 10 years to the debt.

If Trump does move to decertify the Iran nuclear deal and kick the matter to Congress, Corker, as Foreign Relations Committee chairman, would play a significan­t role.

Separately, in tweets Saturday, Trump once again caused consternat­ion within the political establishm­ent and in world capitals by hinting at military action against North Korea, keeping alive tensions with the isolated nation and distancing himself further from his top aides who favor diplomacy.

“Presidents and their administra­tions have been talking to North Korea for 25 years, agreements made and massive amounts of money paid,” he said, leaving unclear what money he was talking about. The approach, he wrote, “hasn’t worked” and ended up “making fools of U.S. negotiator­s.”

“Sorry, but only one thing will work!” the president concluded, ominously but without elaboratio­n.

The president started on Twitter early Saturday with a post confirming that he’d been in touch with the Senate Democratic leader to gauge interest in a healthcare deal: “I called Chuck Schumer yesterday to see if the Dems want to do a great HealthCare Bill. ObamaCare is badly broken, big premiums. Who knows!”

Yet Trump made it clear that he insists on repealing the Affordable Care Act, not fixing it, and Schumer was quick with a statement that repeal is “off the table.”

In the brief comments to reporters Saturday, Trump also took a swipe at Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, saying he was “not at all surprised” by revelation­s in the New York Times that the movie producer and Democratic donor has repeatedly paid to settle charges of sexual harassment.

When a reporter noted that Trump’s comment came on the anniversar­y of last year’s release of the infamous “Access Hollywood” tape from 2005, in which he bragged in vulgar terms about assaulting women by grabbing them by the genitals, Trump again dismissed the allegation­s against him as “locker room talk.”

On Sunday, he appeared eager to stoke the controvers­y over NFL players who kneel in protest during the national anthem. Vice President Mike Pence and his wife, Karen, left an Indianapol­is Colts game after several players from the opposing team, the San Francisco 49ers, opted to “take a knee.”

Afterward, the president claimed credit for the walkout, tweeting that he had instructed Pence to leave the stadium if any players knelt.

 ?? Michael Reynolds EPA-EFE/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? PRESIDENT Trump castigated Sen. Bob Corker in a series of tweets Sunday, including saying that he was “largely responsibl­e for the horrendous Iran Deal.”
Michael Reynolds EPA-EFE/REX/Shuttersto­ck PRESIDENT Trump castigated Sen. Bob Corker in a series of tweets Sunday, including saying that he was “largely responsibl­e for the horrendous Iran Deal.”

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