I've been saying Trump's an incompetent fucktard all along.......
GOP DOUBTS AND ANXIES ABOUT TRUMP BURST INTO THE OPEN
JULIE PACE AND BILL BARROW, AP
WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump's racially fraught
comments about a deadly neo-Nazi rally have thrust into the open some
Republicans' deeply held doubts about his competency and temperament, in an
extraordinary public airing of worries and grievances about a sitting president
by his own party.
Behind
the high-profile denunciations voiced this week by GOP senators once considered
Trump allies, scores of other, influential Republicans began to express grave
concerns about the state of the Trump presidency. In two dozen interviews with
Associated Press reporters across nine states, Republican politicians, party
officials, advisers and donors expressed worries about whether Trump has the
self-discipline and capability to govern successfully.
Eric
Cantor, the former House minority leader from Virginia, said Republicans
signaled this week that Trump's handling of the Charlottesville protests was
"beyond just a distraction."
"It
was a turning point in terms of Republicans being able to say, we're not even
going to get close to that," Cantor said.
Chip Lake,
a Georgia-based GOP operative who did not vote for Trump in the general
election, raised the prospect of the president leaving office before his term
is up.
"It's
impossible to see a scenario under which this is sustainable under a four-year
period," Lake said.
Trump's
handling of the protests in Charlottesville, Virginia, has shaken his
presidency unlike any of the other self-created crises that have rattled the
White House during his seven months in office. Business leaders have bolted
from White House councils, wary of being associated with the president.
Military leaders distanced themselves from Trump's assertion that "both
sides" — the
white supremacists and the counter-protesters — were to blame for the violence that left one protester dead.
And some members of Trump's own staff were outraged by his combative assertion
that there were "very fine people" among those marching with the
white supremacists, neo-Nazis and KKK members.
Importantly, the
Republicans interviewed did not line up behind some course of action or an
organized break with the president. Some expressed hope the recent shakeup of
White House advisers might help Trump get back in control of his message and
the GOP agenda.
Still,
the blistering and blunt statements from some Republicans have marked a new
phase. Until now, the party has largely kept its most troubling doubts about
Trump to whispered, private conversations, fearful of alienating the
president's loyal supporters and upending long-sought GOP policy goals.
Tennessee
Sen. Bob Corker, the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee and a foreign
policy ally of the Trump White House, delivered the sharpest criticism of
Trump, declaring that the president "has not yet been able to demonstrate
the stability nor some of the competence that he needs to" in dealing with
crises.
Corker's
comments were echoed in the interviews with two dozen Republican officials
after Trump expressed his views in Tuesday's press conference. More than half
spoke on the record, while the others insisted on anonymity in order to speak
candidly about the man who leads their party and remains popular with the
majority of GOP voters.
A
handful defended Trump without reservation. South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster,
an early supporter of the president, said he "proudly" stands with
Trump and said he was succeeding despite a "constant barrage of negative
attacks from the left."
But
others said recent events had shifted the dynamic between the president and his
party.
"I
was never one that was convinced that the president had the character to lead
this nation, but I was certainly willing to stand by the president on critical
issues once he was elected," said Clarence Mingo, a Republican state
treasurer candidate in Ohio. "Now, even where good conservative policies
are concerned, that progress is all negated because of his inability to say and
do the right things on fundamental issues."
In
Kentucky, Republican state senator Whitney Westerfield called Trump's comments
after the Charlottesville protests "more than a gaffe."
"I'm
concerned he seems to firmly believe in what he's saying about it,"
Westerfield said.
Trump
has survived criticism from establishment Republicans before, most notably when
GOP lawmakers across the country distanced themselves from him in the final
weeks of the campaign following the release of a video in which the former
reality television star is heard making predatory sexual comments about women.
Many of those same lawmakers ultimately voted for Trump and rallied around his
presidency after his stunning victory.
GOP
efforts to align with Trump have largely been driven by political realities.
The president still commands loyalty among his core supporters, though some
recent polls have suggested a slight weakening there. And while his style is
often controversial, many of his statements are often in line with those
voters' beliefs, including his support after Charlottesville for protecting
Confederate monuments.
Brian
Westrate, a small business owner in western Wisconsin who is also chairman of
the 3rd Congressional District Republican Party, said Trump supporters long ago
decided to embrace the unconventional nature of his presidency.
"I
don't think that anything has fundamentally changed between now and when the
election was," he said. "The president remains an ill-artful,
ill-timed speaker who uses Twitter too often. That's not new. ... The president
is still the same guy and the left is still the same left."
Some
White House officials do privately worry about slippage in Trump's support from
congressional Republicans, particularly in the Senate. GOP senators couldn't
cobble together the 50 votes needed to pass a health care overhaul and that
same math could continue to be a problem in the fall, as Republicans work on
reforming the tax code, which is realistically the party's last opportunity to
pass major legislation in 2017.
Tom
Davis, a Republican state senator representing a coastal South Carolina
district, said that when Trump can move beyond the crisis of the moment, he
articulates policies that could help the country's economic situation. But
Davis said Trump is also part of the reason not much progress has been made.
"To
his discredit, he's been maddeningly inconsistent in advancing those policies,
which is part of the reason so little has been accomplished in our nation's
capital these past six months," Davis said.
Mike
Murphy, a veteran Republican strategist who most recently tried to help Jeb
Bush win the 2016 GOP presidential primary, said the early optimism some
Republicans felt about their ability to leverage Trump's presidency has all but
evaporated in the days following the Charlottesville protests.
"Most
party regulars have gone from an initial feeling of guarded optimism that Trump
would be able to stumble along while Mitch (McConnell) and (Paul) Ryan do the
big lifting and pass our Republican agenda to a current feeling of deep
frustration and despair," Murphy said.
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