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An Angry Weekend Follows On Heels Of Frustrations For Trump


President Donald Trump started his weekend in Florida in a fit of anger over his young administration getting sidetracked just days after his most successful moment in office. He returned to the White House late Sunday derailed – again.

Trump’s frustration appeared to be both the symptom and the cause of his recent woes. Angry about leaks, errant messaging and his attorney general landing in hot water, he fired off a series of tweets that only ensured more distractions.

His staff had hoped to build on the momentum generated by his speech to Congress by rolling out his revamped travel ban and, potentially, unveiling his health care plan. Those efforts rapidly unraveled, sparking more staff infighting and enraging a president loathe to publicly admit a mistake and eager to shift the blame onto others.

And now, as Trump begins one of the most pivotal weeks yet for his presidency, his staff is facing the fallout from another allegation of close ties to Russia and the president’s unsubstantiated claims that his predecessor ordered him wiretapped during the campaign.

Trump simmered all weekend in Florida before returning to Washington ahead of signing new immigration restrictions, according to associates who spoke to the president and, like others interviewed, requested anonymity to discuss private conversations. Those close to Trump said it was the angriest he’s been as president, his rage bursting to the surface at his senior staff Friday afternoon in the Oval Office.

Trump was furious about the negative impact of the flap over Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ meetings with the Russian ambassador to the U.S. He told one person he personally felt let down that his senior staff were unable to fight back against the story. He also suggested he felt that Sessions’ move to recuse himself from any investigation into administration links to Russia felt like an admission of defeat, said the person who spoke to the president over the weekend but declined to be named discussing private conversations.

Sessions’ decision particularly infuriated a president who promised repeatedly during the campaign that he’d “win so much the American people would be tired of winning” and he felt that it was a sign of weakness, the person said.

White House chief of staff Reince Preibus, scheduled to travel with Trump to his coastal Palm Beach estate, was told to stay behind. White House chief strategist Steve Bannon also remained in Washington but later flew to Mar-a-Lago.

Those close to Trump have said he has had his happiest days as president at Mar-a-Lago. He didn’t cool off there this weekend.

Many West Wing staffers who stayed behind in Washington awoke Saturday morning to the chiming of their cell phones. The president was tweeting just after dawn to hurl the extraordinary accusation that President Barack Obama had ordered Trump Tower to be wiretapped, a charge for which Trump provided no evidence.

Trump had stayed disciplined on Twitter for days surrounding his congressional speech, but no more. Staffers planning to spend the weekend preparing for the president’s new executive orders were instead sent scrambling to deal with the incendiary tweetstorm, their carefully laid plans again wrecked 140 characters at a time.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer, an honored guest at Saturday night’s annual white-tie Gridiron Dinner, a night of witticisms delivered by reporters and politicos alike, spent most of the night with his head buried in his phone, missing many of the jokes, several at his expense. Sessions had been slated to attend the event but canceled after the revelations about his meetings with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak.

The first travel ban, which was hastily written with little outside consultation, was struck down by a federal court. Weeks of planning and delays have gone into the second order, one that is also sure to face legal challenges and, were it to suffer a second legal defeat, could have a devastating political impact.

Some Trump allies have been frustrated by his conspiracy-mongering about the inauguration crowd size and claims of widespread voter fraud, believing those accusations had become distractions to their agenda. Afraid to upset the mercurial president, they scrambled to fulfill his request to probe the alleged wiretapping.

On Sunday, the White House asked Republicans in Congress to search for evidence. Obama’s intelligence chief would soon say no such action was ever carried out, and a U.S. official would confirm that the FBI had asked the Justice Department to dispute the allegation.

“I think the bigger thing is, let’s find out. Let’s have an investigation,” said White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders on ABC. “If they’re going to investigate Russia ties, let’s include this as part of it. And so that’s what we’re asking.”

Other Republicans seemed baffled by the charges, which could prove a distraction in the week ahead.

“The president put that out there, and now the White House will have to answer as to exactly what he was referring to,” said Florida Sen. Marco Rubio on CNN.

But Trump told friends that he was certain he’d be vindicated.

“I spoke with the president twice yesterday about the wiretap story. I haven’t seen him this pissed off in a long time,” wrote Christopher Ruddy, a longtime Trump friend and head of NewsMax. “When I mentioned Obama ‘denials’ about the wiretaps, he shot back: ‘This will be investigated, it will all come out. I will be proven right.'”

The president, accustomed to a culture of corporate loyalty enforced by iron-clad nondisclosure agreements, also continued to rage about the leaks that have plagued his White House. He blames the leaks, rather than any of his own decisions, for his administration’s shaky start and is threatening to make changes if they continue, according to one person who spoke to him. That could include making the administration’s public case for policies, as he did in a lengthy news conference and his congressional speech, both performances praised by his backers.

Trump has been particularly incensed over the leaks about Russia ties, which have dogged him since his election. During the transition he ripped the intelligence community for being behind the leaks and even compared them to Nazi propaganda. Lately, he has blamed Democrats, suggesting that they were using them as an excuse for Hillary Clinton’s defeat.

(AP)



12 Responses

  1. On vacation yet again. He has cost the taxpayers in a little over a month more than obama did in 8 years. Trump has created his own troubles, being insane makes him unfit for office.

  2. How much longer will America’s illegal Muslim ex-President linger on near or in the White House TO TERRORIZE AMERICA’S GREATEST PRESIDENT? President Trump should send him back to his birth country or at least have him arrested for treason and bullying.

    This vile monster who was elected mostly by fraud (like Hillary) (according to Wikileaks, I believe) is the first President in America’s history to behave like a madman after leaving office. This maniac is so jealous of President Trump’s accomplishments and so resentful of Trump’s crushing his legacy of idiocy, that he’s literally going mad.

  3. according to what i read, osama never denied it. he just stated “no president can unilaterally order wiretapping” why didnt he deny it

  4. #1 You must have forgotten the 2 costly vacations your Muslim-in-Chief flew his family on Air Force One in his first month in office costing taxpayers excessive amounts.

    And how many times your Muslim-in-Chief with his aides flew via Air Force One and jets to Arizona and Canada for stupidities in his first month costing additional millions to taxpayers.

    When your Muslim illegal president does it, it’s OK but when President Trump does so, it’s a problem. Hypocrite!

  5. This and other articles seem to portray an angry and disturbed individual, lacking in any self-restraint, roaming around in the early hours of the AM wanting to strike back at an unknown enemy engaging in horrific atrocities against him but no knowing how. These “Tweets” provide him an outlet where there is no filtering process. While no one takes him seriously, its a bit unnerving to think about what happens when his anger suddenly turns to demons we cannot fathom.

  6. Arye,

    Why do you continue to blame Obama ? Your candidate is in the WH. Let him man up and take responsibility for his own actions. Stop whining.

  7. I now believe that Arye (commenter 2 and 4 above) is a fake. No one can be as nonsensical as he/she is.

    I do like the second paragraph of comment 2 – who is the “vile monster” that Arye is referring to? Obama or Trump? And Arye alleges that Obama is behaving like a madman after leaving office. I think the same thing about Trump, but he is in office not out of it … hmmmmm … actually, Trump is “out of it”, but not out of office.

  8. To No. 7…

    please, please don’t insult Arye or he may go away…Most Trumpkopfs are logical, objective but boring; Arye provides us with the comic relief we so badly need in these troubled times.

  9. RT ,ZALMAN ,GADOLHADOR
    I Know you guys
    LOVE MEDINAS YSROEL LIKE OBAMA,
    ARYE the only thing they care is to be anty Tzionim there Torah is only against Medinas yisroel
    You are a loud to cheetah to steal or make chilul Hashem
    The Palestinians are waiting for this guy’s to bring Mashiach

  10. Common for the libs on this site to only post in an article that attacks trump

    They love playing offense rather than defense, however winners play both sides of the court

  11. #9 Only ones lacking in yiras Shomayim and ahavas Hashem prefer immoral lowlifes like Clinton & Obama and hate our G-d fearing and honest President Trump and Gedolei Yisroel in general. No doubt about it and I’m sure they would agree. Gadol is best proof of this.

  12. To No. 11…

    Yasher koach Aryelah…I especially like your line about our “god-fearing and honest president”….very well done.

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