Republicans express fears Trump will lose
presidential election
Ted Cruz says he’s afraid of ‘bloodbath of Watergate
proportions’ as John Cornyn slams Trump for ‘creating confusion’ over Covid
Richard
Luscombe
@richlusc
Sat 10 Oct
2020 19.31 BSTLast modified on Sat 10 Oct 2020 19.33 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/oct/10/republicans-presidential-election-fears-biden-trump
Ted Cruz
fears an election “bloodbath”. His fellow top Republican senator Thom Tillis is
talking in terms of a Joe Biden presidency. And even Mitch McConnell, the
fiercely loyal Senate majority leader, won’t go near the White House over
Donald Trump’s handling of coronavirus protocols.
Individually,
they could arguably be seen as off-the-cuff comments from Trump’s allies
attempting to rally support for the US president just days ahead of a general
election that opinion polls increasingly show him losing.
But
collectively, along with pronouncements from several other Republicans
appearing to distance themselves from Trump, his administration and its
policies, it reflects growing concern inside the Republican party’s top tier
that 3 November could be a blowout win for Joe Biden and the Democrats.
“I think it
could be a terrible election. I think we could lose the White House and both
houses of Congress, that it could be a bloodbath of Watergate proportions,”
Cruz, the junior senator for Texas and former vocal critic of Trump, said in an
interview on CNBC’s Squawk Box on Friday.
“I am
worried. It’s volatile, it’s highly volatile,” he added, although he did say he
also saw the possibility of Trump re-elected “with a big margin”.
Tillis, one
of several Trump associates who contracted Covid-19 apparently at a
super-spreader White House event two weeks ago, faces a tough fight for
re-election as senator for North Carolina, and raised the prospect of a Trump
defeat during a debate against Democratic challenger Cal Cunningham.
“The best
check on a Biden presidency is for Republicans to have a majority in the
senate,” he said, inadvertently suggesting he thought a Democratic victory next
month could be a done deal. “Checks and balances does resonate with North
Carolina voters,” he added.
Elsewhere,
Republican displeasure at Trump is becoming increasingly evident, especially
among candidates locked in tight election races of their own.
Martha
McSally, the Arizona senator trailing the former Nasa astronaut Mark Kelly by a
significant margin, attacked Trump for his repeated attacks on her predecessor,
John McCain. “Quite frankly, it pisses me off when he does it,” she said in a
debate this week.
The Texas
senator John Cornyn slammed Trump this week for “creating confusion” over
coronavirus and “letting his guard down” as the pandemic spread across the
nation.
McConnell’s
comments, meanwhile, about why he has not been to the White House for at least
two months could be seen in a different context, given he is 78 and in the same
at-risk demographic as the already infected president.
“My
impression was that their approach to how to handle this is different from mine
and what I suggested that we do in the Senate, which is to wear a mask and
practice social distancing,” he said.
But dissent
from the staunch Trump ally has been almost unheard of through the four years
of the presidency. McConnell’s words seem to reflect the threat that a
nationwide backlash to Trump’s pandemic handling poses to the Republican senate
majority.
Johnny
McEntee
Director of
the Presidential Personnel Office Johnny McEntee, right, who traveled
frequently with President Donald Trump before the White House was struck by a
coronavirus outbreak, has clashed with some top agency officials over his
efforts to install loyalists throughout the executive branch. | Andrew
Harnik/AP Photo
WHITE HOUSE
Trump personnel office weighs asking appointees
to offer their resignations
The potential plan is angering officials who fear it
will cause chaos in their personal lives as they plot their next moves.
By DANIEL
LIPPMAN
10/09/2020
05:21 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/09/white-house-appointees-resignations-428412
The White
House Presidential Personnel Office is considering asking nearly every
political appointee in the Trump administration to write and tender provisional
letters of resignation right before the election, according to two senior
administration officials.
The
personnel office would then decide which ones to accept and which to reject —
giving President Donald Trump maximum flexibility in choosing his team in a
possible second term.
The
potential maneuver has angered some officials as appointees calculate their
next career moves — weighing their loyalty to the president and his agenda
against the danger that he may lose in November and leave them scrambling for
gainful employment.
“It’s a
rotten way to treat people who risked their own reputations and career paths to
join the administration and have been working tirelessly to get the president
over the finish line,” said one of the officials, who spoke on condition of
anonymity so as to not publicly antagonize the White House.
The
personnel office is led by Johnny McEntee, a 30-year-old former Trump body man
who has sought to replace political appointees seen as unreliable allies of the
president with unquestionably loyal devotees of Trump.
McEntee,
who traveled frequently with Trump before the White House was struck by a
coronavirus outbreak, has clashed with some top agency officials over his
efforts to install loyalists throughout the executive branch. In some cases,
the new appointees had not even finished college at the time of their arrival.
Asked for
comment, a senior White House official said it was “standard practice to review
personnel going into a potential second term,” but stressed that “no definitive
plans are in place.” McEntee didn’t immediately respond to a request for
comment.
But
veterans of the personnel office say that asking for provisional resignation
letters ahead of an election — rather than, say, in January before Inauguration
Day — would be highly unusual.
“None of
the Republican administrations have done that before,” said a former official
who has worked in the personnel office in past GOP administrations. A former
senior Obama White House PPO official also said that the office did not ask for
letters of resignation from all political appointees back in 2012, and slammed
the potential move as “incredible.”
The two
current senior administration officials said PPO’s pending order for these
resignations is not yet widely known within the administration — nor was it
clear the president is aware of the personnel office’s plans or has approved
them. Trump said in August that he considers “firing everybody.”
If Trump
loses, it’s unclear if any of the resignation letters would be accepted or if
appointees would be allowed to leave the administration on their own terms. But
administration officials expect a mad scramble to find post-Trump employment,
raising the prospect of an already hollowed out federal government emptying
further in its final months.
The
officials familiar with PPO’s plans said they would instill fear and
uncertainty in political appointees, and complained that the potential order
would complicate their ability to find new jobs. It’s easier to find a new job
from a secure perch, they said.
If
Democrats take power, Trump appointees who had well-established careers and
good reputations before the current administration are much more likely to be
able to line up their next gigs than those who owe their current jobs solely to
Trump.
And even if
Trump does win re-election, one of the officials said, “This might create some
anxiety because people have lives and they have to prepare for any kind of
circumstances.” This person added: “So if you have to cut them before they’re
prepared, it’s gonna cause some chaos in their lives.”
Other signs
of friction between McEntee and other administration power centers have emerged
in recent weeks.
In
mid-September, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows announced internally
that many of the White House liaisons at the agencies were going to be
replaced. The memo led to speculation among some officials that Meadows had to
send it out because McEntee was unable to get it done on his own, perhaps
because officials below him were receiving pushback from the agencies and
needed senior-level backing.
And Ben
Carson, the secretary of housing and urban development, also publicly
embarrassed the powerful personnel chief by accidentally letting reporters see
his notes at a speech a couple weeks ago. The notes revealed that Carson was
“not happy” with how PPO was handling his department.
“I am very
loyal to you and after you win I hope to stay in your administration,” read the
typed-up notes, which appeared to be talking points for a chat Carson was going
to have with Trump. “I am not happy with the way PPO is handling my agency.”
PPO
conducted interviews of almost every political appointee earlier in the summer,
which were widely viewed as being loyalty tests. During the interviews,
appointees were also asked whether they planned to stick around for a potential
second term and what job they would want if so.
The
officials said that once such a request for a resignation letter becomes widely
known in the administration, it’s certain to hit morale. The personnel office’s
move would backfire on the White House, they said, and cause disgruntled
officials to leak damaging information on the president or his top aides.
“It seems
like a loyalty test before an election isn’t the smartest way to drive positive
work attitudes,” one of the senior administration officials said.
“Humans are
fickle,” the person added. “They’re working hard to get the president reelected
and at the same time, being told they’re not loyal enough. It’s kind of
a mind f***.”


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