Los Angeles Times

EYEBROW-RAISING TIMES

12 months of reporting on Trump: The fire hose of news is relentless

- By Eli Stokols reporting from washington

Ayear of President Trump is better measured in dog years, with so much being packed into 12 months — a Mueller report, trade talks, tweet storms, rally tirades, terrorist raids, impeachmen­t testimony. As a White House reporter, I often can’t recall what the story was two days ago. Thinking back to January is overwhelmi­ng.

For the first 25 days of 2019, the federal government remained shut down as the president tried and failed to pressure Democrats into approving money for a border wall. At year’s end, we interrupte­d our nonstop coverage of impeachmen­t hearings to bring you the president’s decision to overrule the secretary of the Navy in order to halt disciplina­ry action against a Navy SEAL who was convicted of posing with the corpse of a prisoner in Iraq. And then we interrupte­d that to inform you that the Supreme Court might or might not weigh in to settle the matter of whether Congress has a right to the president’s closely held financial disclosure­s.

The fire hose of news, or what seems in the moment to qualify as “news,” is relentless. The constant, of course, is Trump. That I can remember.

I also remember being in the West Wing in February the day after Atty. Gen. William Barr held a news conference to prebut the report by Robert S. Mueller III, informing the public that the special counsel, after a 22-month investigat­ion, had found “no collusion” between the president’s campaign and the Russians who meddled in the 2016 election. When the report actually became public, the reality proved different — Mueller had opted not to make a decision about whether the president had obstructed justice.

But on the day Barr released his advance spin, the mood inside the White House was something akin to a winning team’s locker room, minus the mist of sprayed champagne. Kellyanne Conway crowed in the White House driveway, telling reporters that all who’d suggested wrongdoing by the president owed him an apology.

The president, relieved to be off the hook politicall­y, immediatel­y found another fight, telling a surprised group of Republican­s that he wanted to try again to repeal Obamacare. He quickly dropped that idea after GOP senators and aides, bruised from their first failed repeal push and from the 2018 midterm election that had delivered Democrats the House, informed him that the politics of another healthcare fight was something less than advantageo­us.

I also remember the president’s reactions in August after a white supremacis­t concerned about halting a “Hispanic invasion” gunned down 22 people at an El Paso Walmart, which was followed hours later by another gunman opening fire and killing nine people in Dayton, Ohio.

Days later I flew with Trump on Air Force One to visit with victims and first responders in both cities. He had already expressed an openness to enacting federal red flag laws and expanding background checks, promising to “come up with something that’s going to be really good.” But shortly after we arrived, the president’s focus on the shooting victims turned inward after Dayton’s mayor, who accompanie­d him on a visit to one of the city’s hospitals, told the media after his departure that Trump’s past rhetoric had been “divisive.”

As we flew from Dayton to El Paso, Trump tweeted that the mayor and “failed Presidenti­al Candidate (0%) Sherrod Brown” were “totally misreprese­nting what took place inside the hospital.” The media were not allowed to follow the president inside the hospital, but White House social media director Dan Scavino assured the world in a tweet that Trump “was treated like a Rock Star.” Within days, intensive news coverage of the shootings began to ebb, and so too did Trump’s interest in gun reform.

I also remember flying with Vice President Mike Pence to

Ankara in October, a 5,418-mile face-saving venture hastily arranged days after Trump agreed during a call with Turkey’s president to move U.S. troops off the Syrian border, enabling a Turkish invasion and the slaughter of Kurdish soldiers who had fought alongside U.S. troops. The crisis, at least for the president, wasn’t the invasion itself but the uproar it caused among Republican­s in Washington, who were appalled over Trump’s hasty retreat and the discouragi­ng message sent to U.S. allies the world over.

After five hours of private talks at the presidenti­al palace, our motorcade sped back to the U.S. Embassy, where Pence earnestly announced a temporary “cease-fire.” In the van, while we were scrambling to learn the details of the cease-fire agreement, we listened to a live stream of a White House briefing by Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney, who admitted the quid pro quo at the center of the Democrats’ burgeoning impeachmen­t inquiry by telling the world to “get over it.”

It has been another year of Trump-dominated programmin­g, shocking story lines overtaken by more shocking story lines, few of them ever fully resolved. Trump and Congress did nothing all year to address climate change, the nation’s crumbling infrastruc­ture or the epidemic of mass shootings. Trade agreements with China and Japan, and a nuclear deal with North Korea, remain unfulfille­d promises. He did finally win congressio­nal approval for his revamped North American Free Trade Agreement at year’s end, 12 months after orchestrat­ing an initial signing ceremony.

For all the nonstop action and commentary, the president’s approval rating has remained static. The base stayed put, and so did Republican­s, even through impeachmen­t proceeding­s as the evidence piled up. More administra­tion officials departed. More of their replacemen­ts were brought on in an “acting” capacity.

In September, the president mistakenly tweeted that Hurricane Dorian could impact Alabama, even though forecasts showed it wouldn’t, and then used a Sharpie to edit an official map of the storm’s projected path, drawing an expanded line around Alabama and the nation’s attention to the lengths he would go to avoid admitting a simple mistake.

He insulted Rep. Elijah E. Cummings and denigrated his hometown of Baltimore as a “rat and rodent infested” place. When Cummings died in October, Trump praised him and offered his condolence­s in a statement but seemed to be the only Washington politician absent from his funeral.

In announcing the successful operation that led to the death of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr Baghdadi, Trump fabricated details of the raid, saying the terrorist died “whimpering and crying” in a tunnel — a detail that no one in the military seemed able to corroborat­e.

He visited the U.S.-Mexico border to show off a segment of new wall, even though it was a replacemen­t for a preexistin­g barrier. He encouraged China to investigat­e Joe Biden while denying, during one of many South Lawn shout-a-thons, that he’d demanded Ukraine investigat­e the former vice president.

At the White House, Trump joked with the leader of Turkey, where there is no free press, about the “fake news” media he had to deal with. He embraced Kim Jong Un in a photo op at the DMZ. He blithely threatened the whistleblo­wer. He stuck to conspiracy theories. He pardoned a Thanksgivi­ng turkey.

A week before Christmas, right as the House began to vote on his impeachmen­t, Trump walked through a cardboard cutout of a brick chimney and onto the stage for a rally in Battle Creek, Mich. At 8:25 p.m., the very moment he became only the third president in history to be impeached, Trump was riffing about a “space force,” nuclear submarines and “Crooked” Hillary Clinton.

That’s just what I can remember. It all seemed quite significan­t at the time.

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