同情特朗普

  • 主题发起人 主题发起人 ccc
  • 开始时间 开始时间
班农痛斥:伊万卡夫妇是所有坏决定的源头
2017-12-24 14:19:25 观察者网
  
浏览附件727617

  今年8月去职的白宫前首席战略师、总统前高级顾问斯蒂芬·班农(Donald Trump)在任期间与特朗普身旁幕僚不和,早已成为白宫公开的秘密。据英国《卫报》报道,班农本周接受《名利场》杂志专访时又一次将矛头直指特朗普的女儿伊万卡与女婿贾里德·库什纳,同时还透露了不为人所知的白宫内幕。

  “所有糟糕的决策都有一个共同的源头——‘贾万卡’(Javanka)”,班农说。“贾万卡”是班农给伊万卡取的绰号,伊万卡与贾里德·库什纳夫妇被认为已经合二为一,而库斯纳又甘受妻子摆布。

  现如今回到极右翼的布赖特巴特新闻网站的班农受访时回忆,在一场椭圆形办公室会议上,自己曾指责伊万卡是“泄密女王”,而对方随即爆粗回击“你是他X的骗子(Fxxking Liar)”,库什纳当时也在现场。特朗普尝试调停,但最终无果。

  班农还谴责伊万卡最近在阿拉巴马州联邦参议员选举中的表态与特朗普相左。共和党候选人罗伊·摩尔(Roy Moore)一直否认有关自己多年前性侵少女的指控,但伊万卡却在一次公开活动中尖锐地表态,“在地狱里有一个特别的地方,为那些对孩子们下手的人准备”。

  对于库什纳,班农则指责其曾鼓动总统解雇联邦调查局前局长詹姆斯·科米,来阻止“通俄门”调查。据报道,今年5月初,班农和库什纳在考虑是否要解雇科米。5月6日和7日的那个周末,当班农留在华盛顿,库什纳、伊万卡等人陪着特朗普来到新泽西州的贝德明斯特高尔夫俱乐部。在那里,他们决定解雇科米。5月9日下午白宫宣布解职消息。

  看到消息后的班农非常愤怒。班农受访称,“这是现代政治史上最愚蠢的决定,毫无例外。一个自己造成的巨大伤口。”

浏览附件727618

  班农批评库什纳在竞选期间企图取得特朗普对手、前国务卿希拉里的黑材料,与俄方人员会面,最终演变成“通俄”丑闻,这完全是库什纳处事不成熟造成的。

  班农指出,这些会面让人觉得特朗普团队在寻求俄罗斯总统普京的帮助。“他正在与俄罗斯人会面,想获得更多东西。这也说明库什纳是个怎样的人”,班农嘲讽道,“他可能想找到希拉里从普京手里拿走一袋现金的照片,这就是他的成熟度。”

  据观察者网此前报道,由于对特朗普政府的不满,班农还曾表示,特朗普“像一个11岁的小孩”,并称自己此前在白宫拥有的只是影响力,而如今离开白宫,他却得到了真正的“权力”。如果特朗普不准备在2020年竞选连任,他将考虑自己出马参选总统。

  《卫报》报道称,由于邋遢的外表,现年64岁出生于弗吉尼亚州一个工人阶级家庭的班农最近还被一名国会议员称为看起来像一个“蓬头垢面的酒鬼”。他体现了特朗普反叛民族主义与反全球化的本性,他被指责具有反犹太主义,尽管他对此否认。

  而现年36岁的库什纳与班农则完全不同,他是纽约地产帝国的后裔,他曾经是民主党的一位捐赠者,并与班农所鄙视的富有的东海岸精英们混在一起。

  《卫报》称,自由派观察人士曾希望伊万卡夫妇能够限制特朗普更疯狂的冲动,但一直以来都很失望。而特朗普宣布美国从巴黎气候协议中退出,这被认为是班农的一次显著胜利。

  “我不知道库什纳与伊万卡给政府带来了什么,有人说他俩能够让总统变得更加温和,继续完成任期,但没有证据可以证明这一点,”一位共和党分析人士说:“恰恰我认为,他们向总统提供的许多建议都不是很好。”

  本周,伊万卡也参与推动的共和党的全面税改法案已经正式签署,这是特朗普的第一个重大立法成就。

  而《华盛顿邮报》却称,“再一次,伊万卡展示出她的无知”。该报一篇文章写道:“她在为危险的裙带关系做广告,是阶级特权的典范,也是无知的共和党人的完美代表。”

  《卫报》分析指出,库什纳的影响力也在下降,这让人们对伊万卡夫妇将在华盛顿停留多长时间产生质疑。

  根据媒体报道,库什纳被认为是特朗普此前决定承认耶路撒冷为以色列首都的关键,但这一举动在国际社会产生了巨大的反响。本周,联合国大会以绝大多数票否决了美国的这一决定。


upload_2017-12-27_15-44-52.png
 
https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...1d4e35920a3_story.html?utm_term=.5f6387bc35fd

Time at Mar-a-Lago is a respite for Trump — and a headache for his staff
Ashley Parker and Josh Dawsey By Ashley Parker and Josh Dawsey
December 29 at 9:51 PM

PALM BEACH, Fla. — When President Trump sat down with a reporter for a wide-ranging, 30-minute interview at his private golf club here Thursday, not a single aide or adviser was present at the table — and not a single aide or adviser knew about it in advance.

The interview was enabled by Christopher Ruddy — a club member with a level of personal access to the president in Florida that rankles White House staffers. He invited New York Times reporter Michael Schmidt as his personal guest to lunInternational Golf Club, sat near Trump’s regular table and brought the reporter over to meet the president, who was still in his golf clothes.

As word trickled back to the White House, advisers worked to reach the president, with Trump’s personal aide interrupting at one point to hand him a cellphone with White House communications director Hope Hicks on the line; she checked in on the interview from afar.

But others were out of the loop even after the Times story was posted online Thursday evening. One White House official, when asked about the president’s impromptu interview, was perplexed, wondering aloud, “What interview? Today?” Another frustrated aide called it “embarrassing.”

Mar-a-Lago — Trump’s manicured, gilded oceanfront retreat here — is the president’s “Winter White House,” the villa to which he escapes for rounds of golf and family time. But, to the chagrin of many aides, Mar-a-Lago also is the place where Trump is often his most unrestrained and unfettered, making it harder for his West Wing staffers to control his daily media diet and personal contacts as they now try to do in Washington.

Inside the White House, aides filter what information gets to Trump and who meets with him, trying to prevent rash or uninformed decisions. They often monitor his call logs, with Chief of Staff John F. Kelly, who often listens in on calls, telling people to approach him when they want to speak to the president.

White House officials said they appreciate that time at Mar-a-Lago is a respite for Trump; it is a familiar and comfortable haven for him to recharge while surrounded by his family and friends. The president often gets less riled by the sorts of stray comments on cable news that, back in Washington, might prompt an angry tweet or rejoinder, one aide said. Mar-a-Lago is not necessarily a panacea for angry tweets — Trump has fired off a few agitated messages since arriving in Florida.

Mar-a-Lago also has its drawbacks, the aides said, particularly in the form of club members and guests who, the aides think, try to take advantage of the president and exploit his relative freedom from the staff and regimens of the West Wing.

“At Mar-a-Lago, anyone who can get within eyesight changes the game,” said a former White House official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to candidly discuss a sensitive subject, and referring to club members and guests who sometimes try the influence the president on policy, share an opinion on his administration or simply say hello. “Everyone who is angling for something knows to be there.”

All presidents have worked to escape the constraining bubble of Washington. When Barack Obama, near the end of his presidency, occasionally slipped the gates of the White House, he would joke that “the bear is loose.” Yet by that metaphor, Mar-a-Lago has become a veritable ursine playground, with Trump starring in the role of chief grizzly — calling outside advisers and confidants while playing both host and inquisitor to his club’s wealthy members.

Mar-a-Lago, said Roger Stone, a former Trump campaign adviser and longtime friend of the president’s, “allows Trump to be Trump.”

“Nobody tells Donald Trump where he can and cannot go,” Stone said. “The president is able to get a lot of information that is normally blocked from getting to him. . . . You don’t have the minders. There is no doubt that he makes more calls.”

Trump’s personal quarters are off-limits to most club members — several friends said they have never been inside.

His regular routine is simple and predictable: He wakes, watches television, tweets, makes phone calls, reads the papers and works. He often emerges for golf if the weather allows, then returns to the club, where he sometimes has lunch or meets with White House staffers. He then returns to his living quarters, emerging again for dinner.

He used to stop by tables to chat or wander the patio but has stopped that in recent months, club members and friends say.

Instead, Trump now sets up “a virtual rope line,” said Ruddy — the chief executive of Newsmax, a conservative media company — where friends such as he, Marvel Entertainment chairman Ike Perlmutter and local restaurant owner Lee Lipton come to say hello.

Trump, for instance, recently chatted with Blackstone CEO Steve Schwarzman for 30 minutes after dining with son-in-law Jared Kushner and daughter Ivanka Trump, according to people familiar with the meeting.

Since becoming president, members’ access to Trump has been tightened, said Shannon Donnelly, society editor of the Palm Beach Daily News. “It is one of the places where he can relax a little bit, but not anybody can just go up and talk to him at Mar-a-Lago,” she said, before adding, “Unless he sees you and motions for you to come over for him.”

And, Donnelly noted, on Christmas Eve, Trump actually walked to the buffet and made his own plate, providing guests with yet another opportunity to interact with the president.

Trump often asks guests about foreign affairs or legislative accomplishments and solicits their opinions on certain aides or how the White House is doing. Earlier this year, Trump quizzed club members about the Paris climate accord and North Korea, one person familiar with his questions said. He has questioned Mar-a-Lago guests, alternatively, on the performance of former chief of staff Reince Priebus and former White House press secretary Sean Spicer, his news coverage, their opinions of Congress and his rally performances, according to several advisers.

“He used to ask guests about ‘The Apprentice,’ or Obamacare, or the Clintons or whatever the topic was,” Ruddy said. “He’s a feedback junkie. If you ever said, ‘I went to your hotel. I went to this golf course,’ he’d say, ‘How was the service? How was the food?’ He is very approachable.”

This holiday trip, especially close to Christmas, Trump had only a small staff with him and used his free time to talk to outside advisers and confidants, and he received stark warnings about how the 2018 political landscape could be challenging for Republicans and how he needs to improve the White House’s political operation.

Nearly any club member determined enough can eventually reach the president. After The Washington Post emailed Howie Carr, a Boston Herald columnist and conservative talk radio host, Wednesday afternoon to ask about the president’s time at Mar-a-Lago, Carr happened to be dining at the club that evening and approached the president to ask whether he had anything to share.

The president, Carr said in an email, specifically mentioned the Republican tax bill, the repeal of the Affordable Care Act’s individual mandate and the opening of Alaska’s Arctic wilderness to oil and gas drilling. “Tell them I am relaxing and enjoying myself and I’m in very good spirits because I’ve just had the most successful first year any president has ever had in American history,” Carr said the president told him.

Asked by Carr whether he wanted to say anything directly to The Post, Trump added: “Tell them to start reporting honestly. They’re very dishonest people. They have to start being truthful.”

Trump’s impromptu Thursday interview with the Times elicited a new round of public hand-wringing, including questions about the processes implemented by Kelly, who accepted his West Wing job promising to impose discipline and order on a White House that had been riven by chaos.

But the president himself had no such qualms. Trump was enthusiastic about the interview and was pleased that the Times was at his golf course, people briefed on the interview said. The president, they added, enjoyed the coverage afterward and noted that it dominated TV most of Friday.
 
Comey-Obama-applaud-Mueller.jpg


Then-FBI Director Robert Mueller, left, acknowledges applause during President Barack Obama’s remarks in the Rose Garden of the White House, June 21, 2013, announcing James Comey, right, as his nominee to succeed Mueller.
 
大过年的,火力真猛啊!

728421


728422
 
两三个月前,还大赞美巴的合作救回美加夫妇和孩子,现在就翻脸不认了。o_O

盟友呼? :D
 
后退
顶部