The Guardian (USA)

James Brown’s cape and Rudy gone wild: key takeaways from Haberman’s Trump book

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

Maggie Haberman’s new book, Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America, was published in the US on Tuesday. As is now customary for books about the 45th president, its revelation­s have been widely reported.

But thanks to the New York Times reporter’s dominance of the Trump beat – before his time in power, through it and after – the intensity of interest has perhaps outweighed that for any other such book.

Here are the key takeaways.

Trump’s Waterloo?

Trump was long said to be in the habit of ripping up notes from White House meetings and throwing them in the toilet. Haberman published photos. Trump is also in all sorts of legal trouble for taking classified material to Mara-Lago, prompting an FBI search. He admitted such to Haberman – perhaps as a result of his comfort talking to a reporter he called “my psychiatri­st”. She also shows him being cavalier with national security concerns regarding Iran and Russia.

Jared who?

Haberman shows Trump relentless­ly mocking Jared Kushner, his sonin-law and adviser, for his voice and manner; wishing Ivanka had married the NFL star Tom Brady instead; deciding to fire both of them then chickening out; ranting about Kushner’s Jewish religious observance; and predicting that Kushner would be attacked, even raped, were he ever to choose to go camping. Kushner, meanwhile, is shown as a White House turf warrior who gloried in having “cut [Steve] Bannon’s balls off” – as the Guardian’s Lloyd Green pointed out, they grew back – and tried to inflate poll numbers so as not to anger his father-in-law.

Ghislaine Maxwell was a worry

Trump fell out with the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and denies wrongdoing associated with him – but nonetheles­s worried aloud that Epstein’s former girlfriend might talk about him after her own arrest. Trump, who denies allegation­s of sexual misconduct or assault from more than 20 accusers, also predicted that “the women” would be the source of most trouble once he entered politics. Melania Trump seems to have agreed – Haberman says she renegotiat­ed her prenuptial agreement.

Trump was racist and transphobi­c

Haberman’s reporting here is not particular­ly surprising but it is routinely horrific. Trump thought Black political staffers were waiters. He said he couldn’t afford to alienate white supremacis­ts, because they tended to vote. He persisted in asking if a notional transgende­r debate questioner was “cocked or de-cocked”.

He was also dangerousl­y ignorant

Wrong-footed by a health official’s uniform, Trump thought the confused apparatchi­k could organise bombing raids on drug labs in Mexico. “The response from White House aides,” Haberman writes, “was not to try to change Trump’s view, but to consider asking [Adm Brett] Giroir not to wear his uniform to the Oval Office anymore.”

Taxes dodge was made up on the fly

Trump pulled his “I can’t, I’m being audited” excuse for not releasing his tax returns out of thin air on his campaign plane – and rolled it out to reporters apparently without legal advice. Those who knew Trump in New York pre-politics suspected his returns would show he wasn’t as rich as he said. Haberman also reports alleged dodgy practices including a parking garage lease payment made with a box of gold bars.

Trump was no diplomat

Among multiple diplomatic faux pas, Haberman shows Trump asking Theresa May why her mortal rival Boris Johnson wasn’t prime minister instead and speaking crudely about abortion, and calling the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, “that bitch”. Trump’s apparent affinity with or interest in Nazi Germany – widely reported but now at issue in a lawsuit against CNN – contribute­d to one chief of staff, John Kelly, deciding the president was a fascist years before Joe Biden said the same. In terms of delicate domestic situations, Haberman shows Trump sarcastica­lly praying for the health of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the liberal supreme court justice who died in late 2020.

Trump hates Mitch

Trump’s disdain for the Senate minority leader is no secret, but he gave it pungent expression in interviews with Haberman. McConnell said Trump was “practicall­y and morally responsibl­e” for the Capitol attack, though he voted to acquit at Trump’s second impeachmen­t trial. Trump told Haberman: “The Old Crow’s a piece of shit.”

Foiled Covid Superman stunt was inspired by James Brown

This bit is as weird as the subhead suggests. Haberman recounts familiar aspects of Trump’s mishandlin­g of the pandemic but also thickens out the tale of how Trump wanted to present his own recovery. She writes: “He came up with a plan he told associates was inspired by the singer James Brown, whom he loved watching toss off his cape while onstage, but it was in line with his love of profession­al wrestling as well. [Trump] would be wheeled out of Walter Reed in a chair … dramatical­ly stand up, then open his buttondown dress shirt to reveal [a] Superman logo beneath it. (Trump was so serious about it that he … instruct[ed] an aide, Max Miller, to procure the Superman shirts; Miller was sent to a Virginia bigbox store.)”

Trump wanted to refuse to leave

Trump denied to Haberman that he spent most of 6 January watching the Capitol attack on TV and refusing to stop it, as congressio­nal witnesses have described. Slightly more surprising­ly, Haberman reports that Trump told aides – including the guy who brought the Diet Cokes – he simply wouldn’t cede power. In his quasi-lega

listic efforts to overturn the 2020 election, he also told his personal attorney: “OK, Rudy, you’re in charge. Go wild, do anything you want. I don’t care.” Giuliani proceeded to go wild.

Some aides tried to rein Trump in

Haberman says William Barr, Trump’s second attorney general, told his president: “People are tired of the fucking drama.” But it seems the publishing industry is not – Haberman has followed Baker and Glasser, Woodward and Costa, Rucker and Leonnig and many, many other authors to the top of the bestseller charts.

 ?? Photograph: Jeff Kowalsky/AFP/Getty Images ?? Donald Trump. New book claims former US president hates Mitch McConnell.
Photograph: Jeff Kowalsky/AFP/Getty Images Donald Trump. New book claims former US president hates Mitch McConnell.
 ?? Photograph: Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images ?? Maggie Haberman poses with her book in New York.
Photograph: Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images Maggie Haberman poses with her book in New York.

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