Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Public House › West Wing leaker: Trump "irrational", staff "demoralized"
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January 26, 2017 at 5:11 pm #64417znModerator
West Wing leaker goes dark after pulling back the curtain: Trump “irrational”, staff “demoralized”
pcolor=blue]Note: looks like you will have to go to the site to read the tweets. [/color]
On Wednesday, a twitter account was briefly active before being shut down. The tweeter, @WhiteHouseLeak, is an anonymous mid-level staffer in the West Wing of the White House, who described a chaotic atmosphere, a demoralized staff, and an unfocused and irrational President incapable of processing information. The staffer is a Republican who apparently worked on the Trump campaign, but is now thoroughly disillusioned by what has been going on. During his brief presence he was tweeting to real reporters, including Fox News and the New York Daily News.
It is impossible to know if the leaker shuttered the account himself or was outed. The tweets have all been deleted, but thanks to screencaps by MC Rantz Hoseley (@MysteryCr8tve) and an imgur by vapensiero they were preserved before vanishing. The presentation here is, I believe, in strict chronological order. I have omitted a few irrelevancies, but most of the 37 total tweets from the account are shown below.
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The thread referred to here, from NYT reporter Maggie Haberman, is very likely the one I will recap below.WHL22.jpg
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The Maggie Haberman thread, which @WhiteHouseLeak described as “correct” and “completely solid” is below:25 Jan
Maggie Haberman ✔ @maggieNYT
A few final thoughts on the weekend/first few days. Trump had less than 4 hours sleep on Saturday, when he woke up and, at about 7 am., 1/
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Maggie Haberman ✔ @maggieNYT
… started calling advisers and aides angry about the @BCAppelbaum RT by parks, accusing media of being out to get him. Trump’s worst 2/
3:53 PM – 25 Jan 2017
454 454 Retweets 974 974 likes
25 Jan
Maggie Haberman ✔ @maggieNYT
…impulse control is when he’s tired or overstretched, or in an uncertain situation. All three took place Saturday. Trump is unable 3/
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Maggie Haberman ✔ @maggieNYT
…to let go of any grievance or perceived slight. And he is genuinely transfixed by people thinking his election isn’t legit. He is 4/
3:56 PM – 25 Jan 2017
480 480 Retweets 1,267 1,267 likes
25 Jan
Maggie Haberman ✔ @maggieNYT
…as his advisers say often, at his most self-destructive when the stakes are high (see post-primary, post-convention, debates) and 5/
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Maggie Haberman ✔ @maggieNYT
…has historically been the one who most undercuts himself. He is also driven by desire to be treated seriously/with respect. For the WH 6/
3:58 PM – 25 Jan 2017
388 388 Retweets 997 997 likes
25 Jan
Maggie Haberman ✔ @maggieNYT
…the idea was that people would be around him who knew him or knew DC or could calm him. The more time ppl spend w Trump, the more they 7/
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Maggie Haberman ✔ @maggieNYT
…tend to adopt his mindset about how he is treated. Not all aides thought Spicer jeremiad was a bad idea. But all shared view POTUS 8/
4:00 PM – 25 Jan 2017
355 355 Retweets 839 839 likes
25 Jan
Maggie Haberman ✔ @maggieNYT
…tend to adopt his mindset about how he is treated. Not all aides thought Spicer jeremiad was a bad idea. But all shared view POTUS 8/
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Maggie Haberman ✔ @maggieNYT
…was being treated poorly. by press. None could get him to move past the feeling of injury, to focus on the enormity at hand. 9/9January 26, 2017 at 5:17 pm #64418znModeratorThe leaks coming out of the Trump White House cast the president as a clueless child
All White Houses leak. Sometimes the leaks are big, sometimes small. But there are always people willing to talk to reporters about the “real” story or about why the chief executive made a mistake in regards to some decision he made.
That said, I’ve never seen so much leaking so quickly — and with such disdain for the president — as I have in the first six days of Donald Trump’s presidency.
Two recent examples:
1. This from the New York Times today on Trump’s impulsiveness:
Mr. Trump’s advisers say that his frenzied if admittedly impulsive approach appeals to voters because it shows that he is a man of action. Those complaining about his fixation with fictional voter fraud or crowd counts at his inauguration, in their view, are simply seeking ways to undercut his legitimacy.
Yet some of his own advisers also privately worry about his penchant for picking unnecessary fights and drifting off message. They talk about taking away his telephone or canceling his Twitter account, only to be dismissed by a president intent on keeping his own outlets to the world.
2. This from WaPo on Trump’s inauguration crowd estimates:
Trump’s advisers suggested that he could push back in a simple tweet. Thomas J. Barrack Jr., a Trump confidant and the chairman of the Presidential Inaugural Committee, offered to deliver a statement addressing the crowd size.
But Trump was adamant, aides said. Over the objections of his aides and advisers — who urged him to focus on policy and the broader goals of his presidency — the new president issued a decree: He wanted a fiery public response, and he wanted it to come from his press secretary.
Time and again, the image of Trump pushed by his “aides” is one of a clueless child — someone who acts on impulse, disregarding the better advice of people who know better. We know he needs to be managed or else he will say and do stupid things, the message seems to be. We’re working on it.
And what we know about Trump from his presidential campaign is that some of his top staffers — most notably Kellyanne Conway — often communicated to the boss via the media. What that strategy suggests is that Trump is influenced at least as much — and, in truth, likely more — by reading the sniping of his aides on background (meaning without their names attached) in the news than he is by private conversations. That the best way to reach him, change his mind or otherwise bend his ear is through a public airing of grievances.
Trump has shown that his tendency to obsessively consume media — especially cable television — is unchanged in the six days since he has become president. He appears to be making policy decisions via things he watches or reads. (Remember Trump’s famous/infamous statement that he got his military information and advice “mostly from the shows.”)
At odds with all of this, however, is the fact that Trump is both deeply proud and hugely image-conscious. Having to read and watch allegedly loyal “aides” casting him as a sort of feckless child constantly in need of guidance wouldn’t seem to be the sort of thing that would sit well with him.
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Tim Miller, a former spokesman for Jeb(!) Bush’s presidential campaign and a frequent Trump critic, summed that sentiment up nicely:Follow
Tim Miller ✔ @Timodc
Trump doesn’t seem like the type who will enjoy his advisors talking about him like he’s a child to the New York Times for long. https://twitter.com/nytimes/status/824597792299581440 …
7:51 AM – 26 Jan 2017
52 52 Retweets 117 117 likes
It doesn’t take much imagination to conjure up an image of an irate Trump surrounded by the various clips of his aides driving the perception that he badly needs to be managed at every moment. If Trump’s entire #brand is centered on being the best/classiest/smartest, these sort of leaks fundamentally undermine that image. And we’re only six days into his presidency!The frequency — and nature — of these leaks are yet another reminder that the Trump presidency is nothing like anything that’s come before it. There is no blueprint. We’re through the looking glass.
But my educated guess is that these leaks must be driving Trump absolutely crazy. And when he gets mad, history suggests he will try to get even. And quickly.
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