San Antonio Express-News

Trump’s ex-campaign chief seeks a comeback

- By Nellie Bowles and Annie Karni

Brad Parscale was sounding upbeat. He has a new company and, he believes, a brighter future.

Parscale, President Donald Trump’s former campaign manager, said he was trying to move on from that bleak Sunday in late September when he made the national newscasts, after police were called to his home in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. His wife told officers he was inside the house, ranting, acting erraticall­y, with a loaded and cocked gun.

Now he is turning to real estate and plans to buy houses and flip them, he said in an interview this month, something he said he was good at. He is also restarting his political consulting firm, Parscale Strategy, and trying to kick off a startup called Nucleus, to process and analyze data for conservati­ve politician­s.

“I spent five years developing the only automated web-based ecosystem that connected all our department­s and made our campaign the most efficient in history,” Parscale said. “And now I want to bring this technology to campaigns all around the world who are right of center.”

Once a midlevel marketing executive in San Antonio, Parscale rose to the president’s inner circle and was hailed, somewhat hyperbolic­ally, as the tech genius whose social media savvy wontrump the 2016electi­on. Parscale became expert in making the Trump campaign messages— sometimes gut-churning and cruel, other times patriotic and nostalgic — go wildly viral, and his dark humor seemed in tune with Trump and his meme-making fan base.

But people who know and worked with Parscale say he grew too enamored with his proximity to power, and naïvely comfortabl­e with his insider status, which rested on the whims of a mercurial president. When he was replaced as campaign manager in July amid questions about his stewardshi­p, particular­ly his spending decisions, it was an embarrassi­ng blow.

In recent phone interviews, Parscale, 44, said he felt demonized by the left, which accused him of digital dark arts he did not employ, and scapegoate­d by the right for Trump’s failed campaign.

“They can’t choose: AMI rich or am I poor? Am I dumb or am I smart?” Parscale said of his political adversarie­s.

He has toggled between frustratio­n that he remains a source of public interest and an inability to stay away from the spotlight. After his personal issues burst into public, he retreated, telling people that he was happy to leave the rat race behind, and that at least he has options because he hasmoney.

He said he had not gone into rehab, as had been rumored, and was not getting divorced. But he was angry about how things went down, and wanted to live “off the grid,” away from the glare of high-stakes politics.

“I’m done with that industry,” he said last month. “It’s a nasty industry. I’ve always been into homes. That’s where I’ve invested. And I have good taste.”

Serendipit­y and savvy

But his initial impulse to jettison politics altogether soon gave way to the gravitatio­nal pull of the game: In a conversati­on a few weeks later, he had changed his mind. He was starting Nucleus.

Parscale’s exit from the Trump campaign could hardly have been more horrifying. A police video from the afternoon of Sept. 27

showed Parscale — shirtless, barefoot, wearing a baseball hat and holding a beer — as he talked to the police after emerging from his home. A split second later, a police officer tackled him, smashing his shoulder and chest into Parscale’s hips, driving him to the ground with a thud.

A few minutes earlier his wife, Candice, in a swimsuit and a towel, had shown officers bruises on her arms, the body camera footage shows. She said her husband had caused the bruises, according to the police report. The video made the evening news shows and soon went viral. Parscale was taken to the hospital and released. His wife later recanted her statements from that day.

The story of howparscal­e came to work for Trump is serendipit­y, plus a little of Parscale’s opportunis­tic savvy. He was already a successful marketing executive, well known in the business circles of San Antonio, when about 10 years ago one of his clients was on a flight next to someone who was about to take a job working for the Trumpfamil­y. The client jot

ted contact info on an airplane napkin, and soon Parscale was looped in to bid on some digital work for the family. He cut his rate to make sure he would get the job.

Parscale and the Trump family clicked, and when the presidenti­al campaign started, he was the obvious choice to handle the website and digital advertisin­g.

Another bit of good fortune for Parscale: He would inherit a data operation from the Republican Party that had been totally overhauled, and he had the perfect candidate to try out the new system. Trump had limited resources and few data ideas of his own. He did not have a big existing digital team. He just had Parscale, who had no experience in politics.

His lack of expertise made him especially open to a powerful tool for reaching voters: Facebook. While others spent on television ads and hiring huge teams, Parscale saw that Facebook ads were cheaper and radically effective at reaching Trump voters. He decided to lean on Facebook for analytics rather than hiring a large team of his own.

“What Brad did was say, ‘We’re not going to ever be able to build it, so we’re just going to outsource all this stuff to Facebook itself, and they’ll run our ad campaign,’ ” said Daniel Kreiss, an associate professor at the University of North Carolina and the author of “Prototype Politics: Technology­Intensive Campaignin­g and the Data of Democracy.” “That was Brad’s true innovation.”

His genius was in making provocativ­e content, editing it into fast-moving clips and testing it quickly to figure out the right tempo and tone. He knew howto select the right music for the video, the right text for the meme, and then sending it full force into the nation’s bloodstrea­m through Facebook.

James Barnes, whom Facebook sent to San Antonio to work with Parscale, said the campaign tapped into what worked very well on Facebook: messages that stir outrage, fear, panic and

a sense of victimhood. That was the message of Trump’s campaign as well.

“A lot of Americans just found Trump appealing and the campaign had relatively good tools to figure out who responded to what,” said Barnes, who by 2020 had left Facebook and was working for a progressiv­e nonprofit to defeat Trump. “That was it.”

Parscale pushes back on the idea that Facebook essentiall­y ran the campaign.

“We asked Facebook for a manual, and they provided us a human one, which was extremely helpful,” Parscale said.

He said his particular skill was in harnessing the emotional charge of the Trump campaign, translatin­g the rage and nostalgia into content that would spread.

“Americana worked,” he said. “Just Americana. ‘Bring back that America pride’ worked. Pictures of a space shuttle. Half my ads just look like a Fourth of July party with a Vietnam vet. I wasn’t some mad genius.”

Importance questioned

As Trump looked ahead to the 2020 election, he chose Parscale as the 2020 campaign manager.

By this time, former colleagues say, Parscale had developed an inflated sense of his importance. Hewould tell people that he and Hope Hicks, the president’s close adviser, were part of a small group of nonfamily members on a text chain with the Trump children. Parscale prided himself on being one of the few people who could tell the president bad news, and that he couldn’t be cut out because of his loyalty.

He saw himself as a campaign manager but also something more: a partner to Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law, who was overseeing the campaign from the White House, and he enjoyed the limelight enough that he would take the stage at Trump rallies and throw red MAGA caps into the crowd.

His Instagram feed was filled with pictures not of the candidate whose campaignhe­was running, but of himself, posing for selfies with fans or signing caps with a black Sharpie like the boss.

But in the summer, as the campaign stumbled, Parscale fell out of favor. In a particular­ly embarrassi­ng moment, teenagers organizing on Tiktok reserved more than 1 million tickets for a Trump rally in Tulsa, Okla., that Parscale had organized, inflating the numbers as a prank. Only about 6,200 people showed up, infuriatin­g the president.

At the same time, Parscale’s spending decisions were increasing­ly being questioned; the campaign had blown through more than $1 billion since the beginning of 2019, and Trump still trailed in the polls. At the White House, Trump was livid about his standing in the polls. Kushner agreed that a change was needed and supported the decision to elevate Bill Stepien and demote Parscale.

While friends advised Parscale to make a clean break from the campaign, he chose instead to accept a smaller role. For the Republican National Convention, Parscale was in charge of video supplement­s to the program. Working mostly from his Florida home, he became frustrated.

In a recent interview on Fox News, Parscale blamed his enemies in Trump’s orbit (without naming them) for his downfall.

He told the Fox News anchor Martha Maccallum that he was no longer in touch with Trump. “It’s pretty hurtful,” he said. “But it’s probably just as much my fault as his. I love that family. Andi gave every inch of my life to him, every inch.”

Current and former Trump officials said they interprete­d Parscale’s reemergenc­e on Fox News after two months of silence as an attempt to increase the value of the memoir he has talked about writing, and to ingratiate himself with a president who may end up retaining a good deal of influence over the Republican Party in the years ahead. He is also trying to rehabilita­te his reputation to better promote his new company.

The promotiona­l material for Nucleus is bare-bones, with a few bullet points of descriptio­n. “A web-based digital infrastruc­ture creates centralize­d hub for campaign,” one reads. He changed the Parscale Strategies site from a stark photo of his face and beard in profile to a more corporatel­ooking landing page advertisin­g, “innovative marketing solutions.”

Of the police episode in September, Parscale said he had been breaking down from stress, anxious about attacks from his own side and still grieving the loss of twin children who died as newborns in 2016.

For now, Parscale’s political legacy is that he was right about Facebook and that he helped Trump score a stunning victory.

 ?? New York Times file photo ?? Brad Parscale, then President Donald Trump’s campaign chairman, introduces him at an Oct. 17, 2019, rally in Dallas. He’s now launching other ventures.
New York Times file photo Brad Parscale, then President Donald Trump’s campaign chairman, introduces him at an Oct. 17, 2019, rally in Dallas. He’s now launching other ventures.

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