WHITE HOUSE
‘I’d be pretty pissed off’: Meadows angers staff
as he cozies up to Trump
Mark Meadows has been one of the few ever-present
aides at the president’s side during his coronavirus battle. It hasn't always
made him popular.
Mark
Meadows
Numerous White House aides said they feel Mark Meadow
has failed to keep hundreds of aides safe.
By NANCY
COOK and MERIDITH MCGRAW
10/08/2020
06:52 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/08/mark-meadows-trump-coronavirus-428175
Since
Donald Trump got coronavirus, Mark Meadows has been one of the few ever-present
aides at the president’s side.
The White
House chief of staff has served as a constant companion, a work colleague and,
at times, the de facto chief briefer on the president’s health — all while
running a Covid-crippled White House. He spent time with an infectious Trump in
his hospital room and now dons goggles, an N95 mask and other protective gear
to brief the president in the Oval Office.
Yet his
loyalty hasn’t necessarily made him popular.
Instead,
his management has left many inside the White House frustrated, including, at
times, Trump himself, according to interviews with 10 current and former senior
administration officials and Trump advisers. Numerous White House aides said
they feel Meadows has failed to keep hundreds of aides safe, not communicating
much about new positive diagnoses within the complex, or signaling what, if
any, safety protocols were being adopted during a frightening seven-day stretch
that saw the virus race around the administration. The lack of information has
bred distrust and low staff morale in a White House already known for
infighting.
The
weeklong stretch marks the capstone of a tumultuous six months for Meadows’
leadership at the White House, a period that has dovetailed with a pandemic, an
economic recession, nationwide protests, and now an uncertain election just 26
days away. One former administration aide said some of the dissatisfaction with
Meadows has been “building for a long time, but this is an inflection point.”
“The
president is the president — you go to work there knowing what he is like,”
said one former senior administration official. “But if I was a midlevel
staffer there I’d be pretty pissed off at Meadows and these guys. It blows my
mind. Maybe they didn’t give a shit about anything.”
Trump
hasn’t been entirely happy with Meadows this past week, either, according to
two Republicans close to the White House. The president and many top allies
were disappointed by the way Meadows undercut the White House doctor’s upbeat
briefing on Saturday outside the hospital. Minutes after the briefing ended,
Meadows tried to anonymously tell the press the president had gone through a
“very concerning” period and was entering a “critical” stretch of his illness.
A handful
of advisers argued Meadows should be fired for offering contradictory and
alarming information about the president’s health. A White House aide defended
the actions, arguing Meadows' comments were “misconstrued” and that he had been
referring to the president’s condition on Friday, while the doctor was
referencing Trump’s status on Saturday.
Then, there
is the question of Meadows’ own health.
He has
tested negative for the coronavirus every day since the president’s diagnosis,
said one White House official. But Meadows, senior communications aide Dan
Scavino and top adviser Jared Kushner are also spending copious amounts of time
around Trump, who has mocked safety protocols like mask-wearing and is still in
the contagious window despite his reduced symptoms. The White House aide said
access to the president is “extremely limited” and that extensive safety
precautions have been taken. Meadows, Scavino and Kushner, for instance, “are
usually in N95s and goggles around the building after they interact” with the
president, the aide added.
A second
White House official argued Meadows would likely not become ill because he had
adopted the medical-grade N95 mask — a move that came only after the president
was hospitalized after experiencing concerning dips in his blood oxygen levels.
If Meadows
contracts the coronavirus and needs to quarantine or take time off, it could
create an even larger leadership vacuum at a crucial political moment. A White
House spokesman declined to answer questions about who would take over the chief
of staff’s duties if Meadows became infected. Mostly likely, it would fall to
one of Meadows’ top deputies like John Fleming, the former congressman from
Louisiana.
There is
historical precedent for a deputy chief of staff temporarily taking over for his
boss. During the Reagan presidency, chief of staff Howard Baker needed to spend
weeks out of the White House to care for his wife, who was dying of cancer. In
his absence, deputy chief of staff Ken Duberstein stepped into the role.
“I’m not
sure anything changes if [Meadows] is suddenly out of the loop,” said Chris
Whipple, author of “The Gatekeepers,” a book on White House chiefs of staff,
and “The Spymasters,” a new book about CIA directors.
Meadows,
Whipple added, “has been AWOL as the White House chief of staff from Day 1,”
arguing Meadows should have played a larger role in urging Trump to act with
alacrity early in the pandemic.
Meadows’
approach to the early days of the pandemic has come under new scrutiny after it
was revealed by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that Meadows went ahead and
hosted his daughter’s wedding in Atlanta in May, defying a statewide order at
the time banning gatherings of more than 10 people. There were 11 bridesmaids,
and photos of the gathering showed guests seated close together, according to
the paper.
Now,
Whipple said, Meadows should be more focused on adopting new safety protocols
within the White House itself as staffers are “dropping like flies with the
virus.”
At least 11
White House staffers have now contracted the disease.
The first
White House official pushed back on that narrative, noting that senior staff
have had multiple conference calls and distributed numerous memos to inform
everyone about the recent coronavirus outbreak.
“We’ve had
extensive guidance and procedures in place for months on what to do in these
situations, where one prefers to telework, needs to telework, where they can
and cannot get testing, what safety precautions are in place,” the official
added, with supervisors from different departments relaying guidance to their
staffs.
Still, a
second former senior administration official said Meadows had done little to
stabilize White House strategy more broadly during a frantic period for the
country. “It is hard to watch,” the person said.
As a former
congressman, Meadows had a reputation of being highly ambitious while not
always being direct with his colleagues. Aides inside the White House are well
aware of that reputation and are now gossiping about what other role he might
be trying to position himself for while serving as Trump’s 24/7 aide.
One senior
administration official believes Meadows may be eyeing the North Carolina
Senate seat, which will open in 2022, when Republican Sen. Richard Burr is
expected to retire. The first White House aide called the concept “ridiculous.”
“It's
looking more and more like he took the job to get on TV and promote whatever
future he sees for himself,” the person said.


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