Trump replaces Parscale as campaign manager
Bill Stepien, another of Trump's top political aides,
will take over as manager of his reelection less than four months from Election
Day.
By ALEX
ISENSTADT
07/15/2020
08:45 PM EDT
Updated:
07/16/2020 12:10 AM EDT
President
Donald Trump has orchestrated a shakeup of his struggling reelection campaign
with less than four months to go, elevating Bill Stepien to campaign manager
and demoting Brad Parscale, who had been serving in that role.
Trump
posted to Facebook on Wednesday evening that Parscale will remain on the
campaign as a senior adviser.
The move
comes amid falling poll numbers and mounting worries over the president’s
political prospects, with Trump himself expressing concern that he’s losing to
Joe Biden. Parscale has been under the microscope in recent weeks, particularly
following Trump’s half-capacity rally in Tulsa, Okla. Parscale was blamed
internally for the rally after boasting beforehand that over 1 million people
had signed up to attend. In private, the president repeatedly criticized
Parscale for the episode.
Replacing
Parscale is a classic move from the Trump playbook: The president replaced two
campaign managers during his 2016 campaign before his surprise victory, and he
has cycled through four chiefs of staff in less than four years in the White
House.
But the
type of attention-grabbing shakeup Trump has long favored doesn't address the
fundamental problems he faces with 111 days left until the election: Americans
are dying, sick and out of work as coronavirus spreads throughout the nation,
and voters have harshly judged his response to the pandemic, sending his
popularity lower than it's been for most of his presidency. Meanwhile, Biden
has established wide leads in national polls and surveys of key swing states,
threatening to not only flip back the Midwest but challenge Trump in longtime
Republican strongholds in the South and Southwest, like Arizona and Georgia.
Trump began
informing advisers of the shakeup Wednesday before making the announcement
official. Replacing Parscale had been under consideration for about a month
prior to Wednesday's announcement, people close to the president said.
Senior
advisers point out that, unlike past Trump campaign managers, Parscale has been
asked to remain on the campaign. Parscale has spent the last decade working for
the Trump organization, has been a favorite of the president’s family and was
placed in the campaign manager role by Kushner.
Parscale,
who managed Trump's digital advertising during the 2016 campaign and was named
campaign manager in 2018, spent months building a more professionalized
reelection campaign that was in stark contrast to the chaotic 2016 operation.
Under his leadership, the campaign had remained largely stable until recently,
as the president turned his eye more and more to the election. Some party
officials were stunned by the suddenness of the shakeup.
Parscale
will remain focused on his specialty areas, digital politicking and data
management, according to people briefed on the campaign shakeup. The former
campaign manager has played a key role in building up Trump's campaign into a
small-donor juggernaut, raking in millions of dollars per month via email and
other digital appeals in addition to big-dollar events starring Trump, Vice
President Mike Pence and others.
Stepien is
a longtime Trump adviser. After joining the president’s campaign in the summer
of 2016, he went on to become White House political director. After the 2018
midterms, he left the White House to join the reelection effort as a
consultant. He was recently promoted to deputy campaign manager, a move
intended to bolster Parscale amid the campaign’s struggles. Like Parscale,
Stepien is close to Kushner.
Prior to
joining Trump’s orbit, Stepien served as a top political adviser to ex-New
Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who cut Stepien loose over emails in which he dismissed
the George Washington Bridge scandal as “fine” and mocked the mayor of Fort
Lee, N.J. as an “idiot.” Another Christie aide later testified that he told
Stepien about the "Bridgegate" scheme, which was designed to snarl
traffic in Fort Lee as political retribution against the mayor. Stepien has
denied knowing about the plan and was not charged with a crime.
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Stepien's
elevation is the latest in a series of moves the president has made to revamp
his faltering campaign in recent weeks, as his closest confidantes sounded the
alarm about his standing. Last month, the president had dinner with Home Depot
co-founder Bernie Marcus, a Republican megadonor, who suggested he make
changes.
Trump
recently re-hired Jason Miller, who was a top aide in 2016, and in late June,
Trump loyalist Michael Glassner was replaced as chief operating officer by 2016
campaign adviser Jeff DeWit. Meanwhile, Trump's son-in law, Jared Kushner, has
been asserting more control over the president’s political apparatus behind the
scenes. Kushner has been a key player in orchestrating the recent staff moves.


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