2020
ELECTIONS
Paranoia and finger-pointing in Trumpworld as
election approaches
Accusations are flying in all directions and about all
manner of topics.
By ALEX
ISENSTADT
10/24/2020
07:00 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/10/24/trump-election-paranoia-431330
President Donald Trump’s top advisers have plunged
into a bitter round of finger-pointing and blame-shifting ahead of an
increasingly likely defeat.
Accusations
are flying in all directions and about all manner of topics — from allegedly
questionable spending decisions by former campaign manager Brad Parscale, to
how White House chief of staff Mark Meadows handled Trump's hospitalization for
Covid-19, to skepticism that TV ads have broken through. Interviews with nearly
a dozen Trump aides, campaign advisers and Republican officials also surfaced
accusations that the president didn’t take fundraising seriously enough and
that the campaign undermined its effort to win over seniors by casting Democrat
Joe Biden as senile.
Finger-pointing
is a common feature of campaigns that think they’re losing, but it's happening
at an uncommon level in this campaign. Shifting responsibility has been a
staple of the Trump presidency — and his lieutenants are now following suit.
Top Trump
advisers insist they remain confident, with campaign manager Bill Stepien
saying privately the president still has a path to victory. On Friday, Trump's
team boasted about his improved debate performance, and said the president had
zeroed in on a clear line of attack for the final week: That during his five
decades in Washington, Biden had failed to fulfill the promises he's now making.
But senior
Republicans say a culture of paranoia has developed in the waning days of the
race, with fears mounting that they will be the targets of post-election
attacks if Trump loses, which could damage their careers going forward.
“I haven’t
worked for Donald Trump since 2015, but I guess nothing changes,” said Sam
Nunberg, a former Trump political adviser.
Much of the
blame is being directed at Parscale, who was ousted as campaign manager in July
amid mounting questions over his stewardship of the reelection effort. Campaign
aides say Parscale miscalculated by raising questions about Biden’s mental
acuity, which hurt the president among seniors.
But most of
the jabs are about money. Campaign officials have accused Parscale of spending
lavishly on items such as a $5 million Super Bowl ad and a Trump-branded sky
banner that flew over swing-state beaches. Millions of dollars were spent on TV
commercials during the early days of the pandemic when voters weren’t receptive
to political advertising, and on a massive political infrastructure built far
in advance of the election season.
When
Stepien took over as campaign manager in July, aides said, the reelection
effort had no budget and was on track to go broke. Parscale overestimated how
much the campaign would raise in October by $200 million, forcing it to scale
back TV advertising. Trump, as a result, has spent some of the precious final
hours of the race hosting fundraising events.
Parscale’s
defenders say he's being unfairly scapegoated. Every spending decision he made,
including the Super Bowl ad, had sign-off from Trump’s top lieutenants, and
sometimes the president himself, they said. Much of Parscale’s early spending
was devoted to finding new online donors, his backers say.
The former
campaign manager felt compelled to invest heavily in advertising in May and
June because Trump's poll numbers were sliding amid the onset of the pandemic.
With little backup from the primary pro-Trump outside group, America First
Action, Parscale felt the need to hit the airwaves. The plan, Parscale allies
said, had the support of the president and Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner.
Parscale's
defenders also contend that Trump’s cash crunch has been overstated. While
Trump's political apparatus has $180 million less on hand than Biden's, it’s
more than Trump had at the same point four years ago and enough for the final
stretch. And it was Trump's idea to cast Biden as senile, with the campaign
merely following his lead.
It's not
just Parscale getting blamed for Trump's predicament. Some Republican officials
are also angry at Meadows for how he managed Trump’s hospitalization. The chief
of staff undercut the White House messaging when he told reporters early on
that Trump was “still not on a clear path to a full recovery.”
The
statement initiated a damaging news cycle, forcing the administration to assure
the nation that Trump was in stable condition.
Officials
also blame Meadows for not doing more to rein in Trump. Among the complaints:
That he should have tried to stop Trump from giving Bob Woodward practically
unfettered access as the pandemic intensified, and that he erred in encouraging
Trump to hold in-person rallies. Others question why Meadows has so far failed
to deliver in congressional negotiations on a coronavirus relief package and
worry the inability to get checks to voters could damage the president in the
election.
But others
argue that it's folly to think that Meadows — or anyone else — could have put
guardrails on Trump.
The
campaign's TV ads are another source of consternation. Earlier this fall, RNC
Chair Ronna McDaniel expressed concern to Trump about the lack of TV ads airing
in her home state of Michigan. Senior Republicans also express worry that Trump
prematurely pulled ads from Ohio, which he's convinced he will win even though
polling shows it remains close.
Even Trump
has told allies he's not a fan of the content of some of the commercials his
own campaign has run.
The
dissension has spilled into the final days of the race. In theory, the campaign
and RNC are supposed to be working in tandem. But senior Republicans have said
the campaign's coordination with the RNC broke down after Parscale's departure,
with little communication between the two organizations.
Campaign
officials insist things have recently improved and that the breakdown wasn't
either side's fault. Reelection campaign and RNC officials, along with Kushner,
met on Capitol Hill last week to ensure the two groups are in sync. Also
present was Katie Walsh Shields, a former RNC chief of staff whom Kushner has
brought in to improve operations. She is being employed by the committee.
Stepien and
McDaniel held a conference call with reporters earlier this week to announce
the two organizations were launching a joint $25 million TV blitz targeting
older adults.
Trump
campaign spokesperson Tim Murtaugh said the campaign and RNC “are on the same
page headed toward the finish line, we have the same goals, and have agreed on
the message and strategy."
RNC
spokesperson Mike Reed said two are "totally united in our efforts."
During a
Monday conference call with campaign staff, Trump dismissed accounts of
division within his ranks and dissatisfaction with Meadows, saying the chief of
staff was “doing an incredible job.”
The reports
“said I wasn’t happy with him. And you know why they said that? Because that
creates bad will, it creates chaos,” Trump added.
Yet Trump
himself is getting blame from his team.
Some people
close to the president say he is partly at fault for the fundraising downturn.
The president canceled some events during part of the pandemic and, unlike
Biden, refused to hold virtual fundraisers.
Others
expressed frustration over his decision to skip the second debate, which would
have been an opportunity for him to gain on Biden, and over his erratic
behavior in the closing days of the race. Meanwhile, reelection officials were
taken by surprise when on the Monday call he delivered a 30-minute
expletive-filled tirade against myriad targets, including Anthony Fauci.
If Trump
goes down, people who know the president say, don’t expect him to take
responsibility.
Michael
Cohen, a former Trump fixer who has since broken with the president, said the
culture of finger-pointing filtered down from a boss who never accepted blame.
That, Cohen said, left lieutenants to fight it out among themselves.
“It can
never, ever be Trump’s fault,” Cohen said. “That’s the rule.”
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário