The Day After Election Day
Current and former Trump administration officials are
worried about what might happen on Nov. 4.
By Ron
Suskind
Mr. Suskind
is an investigative journalist who has written about the presidency and
national affairs for more than three decades.
Oct. 30,
2020
There will
of course be an Election Day — and it could be one of tumult, banners
colliding, incidents at the polls and attempted hacks galore. More likely than
not, it will end without a winner named or at least generally accepted.
America
will probably awaken on Nov. 4 into uncertainty. Whatever else happens, there
is no doubt that President Trump is ready for it.
I’ve spent
the last month interviewing some two dozen officials and aides, several of whom
are still serving in the Trump administration. The central sources in this
story are or were senior officials, mainly in jobs that require Senate
confirmation. They have had regular access to the president and to briefings at
the highest level. As a rule, they asked for anonymity because they were taking
a significant professional and, in some cases, personal risk in speaking out in
a way that Mr. Trump will see as disloyal, an offense for which he has promised
to make offenders pay.
Several of
them are in current posts in intelligence, law enforcement or national security
and are focused on the concurrent activities of violent, far-right and white
supremacy groups that have been encouraged by the president’s words and
actions. They are worried that the president could use the power of the
government — the one they all serve or served within — to keep himself in
office or to create favorable terms for negotiating his exit from the White
House. Like many other experts inside and outside the government, they are also
concerned about foreign adversaries using the internet to sow chaos, exacerbate
divisions and undermine our democratic process.
One senior government official, who spent years
working in proximity to Mr. Trump, said: “He has done nothing else that’s a
constant, except for acting in his own interest.”
Many of
those adversaries, they report, are already finding success in simply
amplifying and directing the president’s words and tweets. And they’re
thoroughly delighted, a former top intelligence official told me, “at how
profoundly divided we’ve become. Donald Trump capitalized on that — he didn’t
invent it — but someday soon we’re going to have figure out how to bring our country
together, because right now we’re on a dangerous path, so very dangerous, and
so vulnerable to bad actors.”
None of
these officials know what will happen in the future any better than the rest of
us do. It is their job to fret over worst-case scenarios, and they’re damn good
at it. I can’t know all their motives for wanting to speak to me, but one thing
many of them share is a desire to make clear that the alarm bells heard across
the country are ringing loudly inside the administration too, where there are
public servants looking to avert conflict, at all costs.
It is
possible, of course, that this will be an Election Day much like all other
Election Days. Even if it takes weeks or months before the result is known and
fully certified, it could be a peaceful process, where all votes are reasonably
counted, allowing those precious electors to be distributed based on a fair
fight. The anxiety we’re feeling now could turn out to be a lot of fretting
followed by nothing much, a political version of Y2K.
Many of the
officials I spoke to came back to one idea: You don’t know Donald Trump like we
do. Even though they can’t predict exactly what will happen, their concerns
range from the president welcoming, then leveraging, foreign interference in
the election, to encouraging havoc that grows into conflagrations that would
merit his calling upon U.S. forces. Because he is now surrounded by loyalists,
they say, there is no one to try to tell an impulsive man what he should or
shouldn’t do.
“That guy
you saw in the debate,” a second former senior intelligence official told me,
after the first debate, when the president offered one of the most astonishing
performances of any leader in modern American history — bullying, ridiculing,
manic, boasting, fabricating, relentlessly interrupting and talking over his opponent.
“That’s really him. Not the myth that’s been created. That’s Trump.”
Still
another senior government official, who spent years working in proximity to Mr.
Trump, put it like this: “He has done nothing else that’s a constant, except
for acting in his own interest.” And that’s how “he’s going to be thinking,
every step of the way, come Nov. 3.”
One of the
first things senior staff members learned about Mr. Trump was that he was all
but un-briefable. He couldn’t seem to take in complex information about policy
choices and consequences in the ways presidents usually do in Oval Office
meetings.
What they
saw instead was the guy from the first debate. He’d switch subjects, go on
crazy tangents, abuse and humiliate people, cut them off midsentence. Officials
I interviewed described this scenario again and again.
In the
middle of a briefing, Mr. Trump would turn away and grab the phone. Sometimes
the call would go to Fox television hosts like Sean Hannity or Lou Dobbs;
sometimes the officials wouldn’t even know who was on the other end. But
whoever it was would instantly become the key voice in the debate.
In one
meeting about the border wall, Mr. Trump called a person “who built a flagpole
at one of his golf courses,” said an official in attendance that day. Mr. Trump
explained that because this person “got in a big fight about the size of the
flagpole” and because it was “really big,” “the president thought, of course,
they would understand how to build a wall.”
“Obviously,”
this official said, “it is not the same.”
“We used to
joke that is was like a phone-a-friend thing, a lifeline thing” from “Who Wants
to Be a Millionaire,” this person said. Soon, senior officials — frustrated
that they couldn’t seem to get a word in during briefings — adopted their own
version of this technique. They’d ask an array of people — some Trump friends,
some members of Congress, assorted notables — to call Mr. Trump and talk to him
about key issues. The callers just couldn’t let on that a senior official had
put them up to it. Two of these senior officials compared the technique to the
manipulations of “The Truman Show,” in which the main character, played by Jim
Carrey, does not know that his entire life is being orchestrated by a TV
producer.
History may
note that the most important thing that happened that day had little to do with
the religious leader and his large life, save a single thread of his legacy.
That would be his grandson, Edward Graham, an Army Ranger “right out of central
casting,” as Mr. Trump liked to say, who’d served eight tours in Afghanistan
and Iraq over 16 years. In full uniform he met Mr. Trump to escort him, and the
two talked about the country’s grueling conflicts overseas.
For Mr.
Trump, the meeting was a face-to-face lifeline call. When he returned to
Washington, he couldn’t stop talking about troop withdrawals, starting with
Afghanistan. During his campaign, he had frequently mentioned his desire to
bring home troops from these “endless wars.” As president, his generals — led
by the polished, scholarly, even-keeled Defense Secretary Jim Mattis —
explained the importance of U.S. troops in stabilizing whole regions of the
world, and the value of that stability. Suddenly, after talking to Edward
Graham, Mr. Trump didn’t want to hear it.
“In a
normal, sane environment,” said a senior Pentagon official, “were it Obama or
Bush, or whatever, they’d meet Billy Graham’s grandson and they’d be like ‘Oh
that’s interesting,’ and take it to heart, but then they’d go and they’d at
least try to validate it with the policymakers, or their military experts. But
no, with him, it’s like improv. So, he gets this stray electron and he goes,
‘OK, this is the ground truth.’ ”
Mr. Graham,
now working in his family’s ministry, said, “Any conversations that I have had
with the president are private.” And, “additionally, when I had those
conversations with the president, I was in the Army and I was speaking with our
commander in chief.”
Several
weeks later, at a speech in Ohio, Mr. Trump said, “we’re knocking the hell out
of ISIS” in Syria and the U.S. troops there would be coming home “very soon.”
Once they
heard this, shock started to run through Mr. Mattis and his old friend, John
Kelly, who’d commanded Marine forces but was then the chief of staff to the
president. Both men understood that the 2,000 U.S. troops in Syria were,
soldier for soldier, probably the most valuable fighting force on the planet.
They not only fought alongside the Kurds in routing ISIS, which was battered
yet still a threat. These few troops helped hold the region intact, supporting
the Syrian Democratic Forces, also filled with Kurds, which in turn checked the
expansion of Syria’s murderous leader, Bashar al-Assad, and also kept Russia,
Mr. Assad’s patron, in check. The Kurds had suffered tremendously in these
conflicts, much more than the Americans had.
Word
spread, and soon much of Congress, the Pentagon, the State Department and Mr.
Kelly were doing various versions of “The Truman Show,” trying to get people on
the phone that Mr. Trump trusted.
This went
on for much of the year — as various voices, both inside and outside of
government, worked to try to excise this idea of pulling troops out of Syria
from the man.
On Dec. 19,
2018, top brass at the Pentagon received notification via Mr. Trump’s Twitter
feed, along with more than 80 million of his followers: The United States would
be pulling troops out of Syria. It wasn’t clear what, precisely, Mr. Trump was
thinking, beyond the tweet: “We have defeated ISIS in Syria, my only reason for
being there during the Trump presidency.”
ISIS was
shrunken, but not yet fully defeated. And the move meant a radical reduction in
American influence in Syria, an increase in the power of Russia and Iran to
determine events there and quite possibly a land grab by the Turkish
government, sworn enemy of the Kurds. Senior leadership of the U.S. government
went into a panic. Capitol Hill, too. John Bolton, who was still the national
security adviser then, and Virginia Boney, then the legislative affairs
director of the National Security Council, hit the phones, calling more than a
dozen senators from both parties. Mr. Bolton started each call, saying, in an
apologetic tone, “This is the mind of the president, he wants to bring home our
troops,” and then switched to frank talk about what might be done. Senator
Lindsey Graham of South Carolina was beside himself. Senator Joni Ernst of
Iowa, who served during the Iraq War, was dumbstruck. So was Senator Dan
Sullivan of Alaska, a colonel in the Marine Corps Reserves who had served in
Iraq and Afghanistan. “Is there any way we can reverse this?” he pleaded. “What
can we do?”
That’s what
Mr. Mattis wondered. He’d worked nearly two years developing techniques to try
to manage Mr. Trump, from colorful PowerPoint slides to several kinds of
flattery. This was his moment. The next day, he suited up, put on his
cherished, navy blue NATO tie, with the four-pointed symbol of the alliance
from which Mr. Trump had threatened to withdraw, and entered the Oval Office.
He tried every technique — his entire arsenal, every tack, every argument. The
president was unmoved. Mr. Mattis paused, and then pulled from his breast
pocket an envelope with his resignation letter.
Down the
hall, the very next day, Mr. Kelly was almost done cleaning out his office. He,
too, had had enough. He and Mr. Trump had been at each other every day for
months. Later, he told The Washington Examiner, “I said, whatever you do — and
we were still in the process of trying to find someone to take my place — I
said whatever you do, don’t hire a ‘yes man,’ someone who won’t tell you the
truth — don’t do that.” But, in fact, that’s exactly what Mr. Trump wanted.
Seventeen months as chief of staff, stopping Mr. Trump from umpteen crazy
moves, from calling in the Marines to shoot migrants crossing the Rio Grande —
“It’s illegal, sir, and the kids, they’re good kids, they just won’t do it” —
to invading Venezuela. The list was long. Were they just trial balloons? Sure,
some were. And, if someone wasn’t there to challenge Mr. Trump, might they have
risen to action? Surely.
“I think
the biggest shock he had — ’cause his assumption was the generals, ‘my generals,’
as he used to say and it used to make us cringe — was this issue of, I think,
he just assumed that generals would be completely loyal to the kaiser,” a
former senior official told me. “And when we weren’t, that was a huge shock to
him, because he thought if anyone was going to be loyal, it would be the
generals. And the first people he realized were not loyal to him were the
generals.”
This shock,
and his first two-plus years of struggle with seasoned, expert advisers, led to
an insight for Mr. Trump. It all came back to loyalty. He needed to get rid of
any advisers or senior officials who vowed loyalty to the Constitution over
personal loyalty to him. Which is pretty much what he proceeded to do.
In February
2019, William Barr arrived as attorney general, having auditioned for the job
with a 19-page memo arguing in various and creative ways that the president’s
powers should be exercised nearly without limits and his actions stand
virtually beyond review. He stood ready to brilliantly manage the receipt of
the Mueller Report in March. Mr. Barr’s moves constituted what amounted to a
clean kill, decapitating the sprawling nearly two-year investigation led by his
old friend with a single blow.
That
summer, two more heavyweight senior officials, Dan Coats, the director of
national intelligence, and his deputy, Sue Gordon, a beloved 32-year veteran of
the C.I.A., both resigned. To replace Mr. Coats, Trump selected Representative
John Ratcliffe of Texas, a small-town mayor-turned-congressman with no
meaningful experience in intelligence — who quickly withdrew from consideration
after news reports questioned his qualifications; he lacked support among key
Republican senators as well. Mr. Trump then picked a communications official in
the administration of George W. Bush and ambassador to Germany under Mr. Trump,
Richard Grenell. Mr. Grenell’s stint was temporary and in May Mr. Trump brought
back his first choice, Mr. Ratcliffe, who is now director of national
intelligence for Mr. Trump’s homestretch and postelection period.
In other
words, by the summer of 2020, Mr. Trump was well along in completing the
transition to a loyalty-tested senior team. When I asked the White House to
respond to this idea, I heard back from Sarah Matthews, a deputy press
secretary.
“President
Trump serves the American people by keeping his promises and taking action
where the typical politician would provide hollow words,” she said. “The
president wants capable public servants in his administration who will enact
his America First agenda and are faithful to the Constitution — these
principles are not mutually exclusive. President Trump is delivering on his promise
to make Washington accountable again to the citizens it’s meant to serve and
will always fight for what is best for the American people.”
The reason
having loyalists at both the Department of Justice and D.N.I. is so very
important for the president is that it allows him, potentially, to coordinate
two key agencies of the government — secret intelligence and prosecution —
toward his own political ends. This is exactly what he was criticized for doing
in the summer and fall of 2020, with Mr. Barr being accused of announcing
politically motivated action and investigations — including to support the
fiction of widespread voter fraud — and Mr. Ratcliffe, with collecting and
releasing information that is targeted at Mr. Trump’s opponents.
The third
leg of what would be an ideal triad for this sort of activity is the F.B.I.
director, Christopher Wray, who drew Mr. Trump’s ire in September, when, in
congressional hearings, he echoed the consensus of the intelligence community
that the Russians intervened in the 2016 election on Mr. Trump’s behalf, that
they were doing it again in this election cycle, that “racially motivated
violent extremism” — coming mostly from right-wing white supremacists — was a
persistent threat, and that widespread voter fraud was a nonissue.
The F.B.I.
has been under siege since this past summer, according to a senior official who
spoke on the condition of anonymity. “The White House is using friendly members
of Congress to try to get at certain information under the guise of quote-unquote,
oversight, but really to get politically helpful information before the
election,” the official said. “They want some sort of confirmation that we’ve
opened an investigation,” for example, into Hunter Biden, “which, again, the
F.B.I. doesn’t confirm or deny whether it’s opened investigations.”
This
official said that Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, chairman of the Senate
Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs committee, “sends letters constantly
now, berating, asking for the sun, moon, stars, the entire Russia
investigation, and then either going on the morning talk shows or calling the
attorney general whenever he doesn’t get precisely what he wants.” The urgency,
two F.B.I. officials said, ratcheted up after Mr. Trump was told three weeks ago
that he wouldn’t get the “deliverables” he wanted before the election of
incriminating evidence about those who investigated and prosecuted his former
national security adviser, Michael Flynn.
Ben
Voelkel, a spokesman for Senator Johnson, specifically disputed the idea that
Mr. Johnson had made requests to receive material quickly for TV appearances.
Furthermore,
he said, “Senator Johnson has been frustrated by the failure of the F.B.I. and
many other federal agencies to timely produce documents since taking over as
chairman of the Senate’s chief oversight body in 2015. In that time, the F.B.I.
habitually rebuffed oversight requests, which prompted Senator Johnson to issue
F.B.I. a subpoena in August 2020. Senator Johnson has been putting pressure on
the F.B.I. — and other federal agencies — because that’s the only way to get
the records the committee is entitled to receive.”
Rumors
swirled a week before the election that Mr. Trump was preparing to fire Mr.
Wray, as well as, perhaps, the director of the C.I.A., Gina Haspel — who had
also drawn Mr. Trump’s ire, according to both former and current senior
intelligence officials. The speculation is that they could both be fired
immediately after the election, when Mr. Trump will want to show the cost paid for
insufficient loyalty and to demonstrate that he remains in charge.
The senior
official at the F.B.I., however, said that “firing the director won’t
accomplish the goal.” There are “37,000 other people he would have to fire. It
won’t work.”
That doesn’t
mean that the president won’t try. Nov. 4 will be a day, said one of the former
senior intelligence officials, “when he’ll want to match word with deed.” Key
officials in several parts of the government told me how they thought the
progression from the 3rd to the 4th might go down.
They are
loath to give up too many precise details, but it’s not hard to speculate from
what we already know. Disruption would most likely begin on Election Day
morning somewhere on the East Coast, where polls open first. Miami and
Philadelphia (already convulsed this week after another police shooting), in
big swing states, would be likely locations. It could be anything, maybe
violent, maybe not, started by anyone, or something planned and executed by any
number of organizations, almost all of them on the right fringe, many adoring
of Mr. Trump. The options are vast and test the imagination. Activists could
stage protests at a few of the more crowded polling places and draw those in
long lines into conflict.
A group
could just directly attack a polling place, injuring poll workers of both
parties, and creating a powerful visual — an American polling place in flames,
like the ballot box in Massachusetts that was burned earlier this week — that
would immediately circle the globe. Some enthusiasts may simply enter the area
around a polling location to root out voter fraud — as the president has
directed his supporters to do — taking advantage of a 2018 court ruling that
allows the Republican National Committee to pursue “ballot security” operations
without court approval.
Would that
mean that Mr. Trump caused any such planned activities or improvisations? No,
not directly. He’s in an ongoing conversation — one to many, in a twisted e
pluribus unum — with a vast population, which is in turn in conversations —
many to many — among themselves. People are receiving messages, interpreting
them and deciding to act, or not. If, say, the Proud Boys attack a polling
location, is it because they were spurred on by Mr. Trump’s “stand back and
stand by” instructions? Is Mr. Trump telling his most fervent supporters
specifically what to do? No. But security officials are terrified by the
dynamics of this volatile conversation. It can move in so many directions and
very quickly become dangerous, as we have already seen several times this year.
The local
police are already on-guard in those cities and others around the country for
all sorts of possible incidents at polling places, including the possibility of
gunfire. If something goes wrong, the media will pick this up in early morning
reports and it will spread quickly, increasing tension at polling places across
the country, where the setup is ripe for conflict.
Conservative
media could then say the election was being stolen, summoning others to
activate, maybe violently. This is the place where cybersecurity experts are on
the lookout for foreign actors to amplify polling location incidents many times
over, with bots and algorithms and stories written overseas that slip into the
U.S. digital diet. News of even a few incidents could summon a violent segment
of Mr. Trump’s supporters into action, giving foreign actors even more to
amplify and distribute, spreading what is, after all, news of mayhem to the
wider concentric circles of Mr. Trump’s loyalists. Groups from the left may
engage as well, most likely as a counterpoint to those on the right. Those groups
are less structured, more like an “ideology or movement,” as Mr. Wray described
them in his September testimony. But, as a senior official told me, the numbers
on the left are vast.
Violence
and conflict throughout that day at the polls would surely affect turnout,
allowing Mr. Trump to claim that the in-person vote had been corrupted, if that
suits his purposes. There’s no do-over for Election Day.
Under the
12th Amendment, which Mr. Trump has alluded to on several occasions, the
inability to determine a clear winner in the presidential election brings the
final decision to the House of Representatives. The current composition of the
House, in which Republicans control more state delegations even though
Democrats are in the majority, favors Trump. But the state count could flip to
the Democrats with this election.
There are
many scenarios that might unfold from here, nearly all of them entailing weeks
or even months of conflict, and giving an advantage to the person who already
runs the U.S. government.
There will
likely be some reckoning of the in-person vote drawn from vote tallies and exit
polls. If Joe Biden is way ahead in these projections, and they are accepted as
sound, Mr. Trump may find himself having to claim fraud or suppression that
amounts to too large a share of votes to seem reasonable. Inside the Biden
campaign they are calling this “too big to rig.”
Races tend
to tighten at the end, but the question is not so much the difference between
the candidates’ vote totals, or projections of them, as it is what Mr. Trump
can get his supporters to believe. Mr. Trump might fairly state, at this point,
that he can get a significant slice of his base to believe anything.
But he
could use all the help that he can summon to invalidate the in-person vote.
Senior
intelligence officials are worried that a foreign power could finally manage a
breach of the American voting architecture — or leave enough of a digital trail
to be perceived to have breached it.
There were enormous efforts to do so, largely but not exclusively by the
Russians, in 2016, when election systems in every state were targeted. There is
also concern that malware attacks could cripple state governments and their
electronic voter registration data, something that could make swaths of voters
unable to vote. A senior official told me that provisional ballots can then be
passed out and “we keep all the receipts,” meaning that these votes would have
a paper ballot trail that can be laboriously counted and rechecked. But a
breach or an appearance of a breach, in any state’s machinery, would, in a
chaotic flow of events, be a well-timed gift to Mr. Trump.
The lie
easily outruns truth — and the best “disinformation,” goes a longtime C.I.A.
rule, “is actually truthful.” It all blends together. “Then the president then
substantiates it, gives it credence, gives it authority from the highest
office,” says the senior government official. “Then his acolytes mass-blast it
out. Then it becomes the narrative, and fact, and no rational, reasonable explanation
to the contrary will move” his supporters “an inch.”
No matter
how the votes split, there’s an expectation among officials that Mr. Trump will
claim some kind of victory on Nov. 4, even if it’s a victory he claims was
hijacked by fraud — just as he falsely claimed that Hillary Clinton’s three
million-vote lead in the popular vote was the result of millions of votes from
unauthorized immigrants. This could come in conjunction with statements,
supported by carefully chosen “facts,” that the election was indeed “rigged,”
as he’s long been warning.
If the
streets then fill with outraged people, he can easily summon, or prompt, or
encourage troublemakers among his loyalists to turn a peaceful crowd into a sea
of mayhem. They might improvise on their own in sparking violence, presuming it
pleases their leader.
If the
crowds are sufficiently large and volatile, he can claim to be justified in
responding with federal powers to bring order. Secretary of Defense Mark Esper,
and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Mark Milley, have both said they
are opposed to deploying armed forces on American soil.
A senior
Pentagon official, though, laid out a back-door plan that he was worried about.
It won’t start, he thinks, with a sweeping move to federalize the National
Guard, which is within the President’s Article 2 powers; it’d be more of a
state by state process. The head of the National Guard of some state “starts
feeling uncomfortable with something and then calls up the Pentagon.”
The F.B.I.,
meanwhile, is bracing for huge challenges. “We are all-hands-on-deck for the
foreseeable future,” the F.B.I. official I mentioned earlier told me. “We’ve
been talking to our state and local counterparts and gearing up for the
expectation that it’s going to be a significant law-enforcement challenge for
probably weeks or months,” this official said. “It feels pretty terrifying.”
In the
final few weeks of the campaign, and during Mr. Trump’s illness, he’s done two
things that seem contradictory: seeking votes from anyone who might still be
swayed and consolidating and activating his army of most ardent followers. They
are loyal to him as a person, several officials pointed out, not as president.
That army Trump can direct in the difficult days ahead and take with him,
wherever he goes. He may activate it. He may bargain with it, depending on how
the electoral chips fall. It’s his insurance policy.
The senior
government official who discussed Mr. Trump’s amplifying of messages spoke with
great clarity about these codes of loyalty. The official was raised in, and
regularly visits, what is now a Trump stronghold.
“They’re
the reason he took off the damned mask when he got to the White House” from
Walter Reed, the official said. “Those people eat that up, where any
reasonable, rational person would be horrified. You are still actively shedding
a deadly virus. You are lucky enough to have the best and brightest doctors,
trial drugs, whatever. You get flown back to the White House, and you do a
photo-op with a military salute to no one. You ask it to be refilmed, and you
take off your mask, which, in my mind, has become a signal to his core base of
supporters that are willing to put themselves at risk and danger to show
loyalty to him.”
But across
the government, another official — a senior intelligence official in a
different department — argues that citizens may yet manage to rise to the
challenge of this difficult election, in a time of division.
“The last
line of defense in elections is the American voter,” he told me. “This is the
most vulnerable phase,” now and the days immediately after Election Day, “where
we’re so eager to have an outcome, that actors both foreign and domestic are
going to exploit that interest, that thirst, that need for resolution to the
drama.”
I asked him
what he would say to American voters. “Look,” he said, softly, “just understand
that you’re being manipulated. That’s politics, that’s foreign influence,
they’re trying to manipulate you and drive you to a certain outcome.”
“Americans
are, I think, hopefully, made of sterner stuff.”
Ron Suskind
is an investigative journalist who has covered the presidency and national
affairs for more than three decades. He is the author of six books including,
most recently, “Life, Animated.”
The Times
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