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It was always going to come to this

Gabe Sherman in Vanity Fair:

Confronting a failed presidency after 100,000-plus COVID deaths and the protests that are still convulsing the nation this week, Donald Trump is venting to West Wing officials that Democratic governors are allowing civil unrest to rage in American cities to damage his reelection campaign. “He feels the blue-state governors are letting it burn because it hurts him. It’s a lot like how he sees coronavirus,” an outside White House adviser told me yesterday, shortly after audio leaked of Trump berating governors on a conference call about quelling the riots.

Trump’s sense of victimhood, and his view that the crisis ignited by George Floyd’s gruesome death is largely a political problem, have resulted in a shambolic White House response, veering from Trump’s retreat to the bunker as the protests neared the White House to the culmination of police using teargas on peaceful protestors so that he could walk through a park to stage a photo op in front of St. John’s Church. “He’s paralyzed,” a former West Wing official told me.

In private, Trump has told people the street violence would subside if the other three Minnesota police officers were charged with murder, a person who spoke with Trump told me. But, always worried about seeming weak, he made no mention of the officers or police brutality during yesterday’s Rose Garden speech. “When things get dicey and hairy, it usually means he relies on his instincts,” a former West Wing official said. “And he’s decided law and order is going to win the day.”

Trump was already struggling to reboot his campaign when the gruesome Memorial Day video leaked, showing officer Derek Chauvin driving his knee into George Floyd’s neck for more than eight minutes as Floyd pleaded for his life. A day after Floyd’s death, Trump promoted two operatives into senior campaign roles, moves that were largely seen as a demotion for Trump’s embattled campaign manager, Brad Parscale. As protests and riots intensified last week, Karl Rove visited the White House to offer advice on appealing to African American voters, a source briefed on the conversation said. Rove’s new role as an unofficial adviser on Trump’s team rankled some in the West Wing and on the campaign. “People aren’t happy about Rove. He’s a Bushie,” the source said. “What’s he going to tell Trump? He’s stale.”

Trump at first seemed to ignore the protests. He didn’t mention Floyd’s name for two days. But by Friday, Trump grasped the scale of the crisis when Secret Service agents rushed him into the White House bunker as hundreds of protesters demonstrated outside the White House gates. “The agents came in and weren’t messing around. It was serious,” Trump later told a friend. “Those guys aren’t going to take any shit.” That night Trump sent out an incendiary tweet threatening that “when the looting starts, the shooting starts,” and another on Saturday about “vicious dogs.” “Trump is pissed that they’re rioting. That’s just the old guy from Queens who’s offended by this. That’s the Archie Bunker in him,” a Trump friend told me.

Around Trump in the West Wing was a fierce debate over how to respond. Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, opposed chief of staff Mark Meadows’s advice that Trump needed to give an Oval Office address to unify the country. “Meadows was close friends with Elijah Cummings. He wanted a different approach,” a former West Wing official said. Kushner argued that Trump hasn’t been successful when he’s spoken from the Oval Office in the past, a source briefed on Kushner’s thinking told me, an assessment Trump didn’t disagree with. “Trump doesn’t like giving Oval Office addresses,” a prominent Republican told me.

Meadows has only been on the job for two months, but already he has told people he is frustrated that Kushner usurps him, sources said. “Mark has told people, ‘I thought I was going to be the engineer, but I’m really just a ticket taker,’” a person close to Meadows told me. Ben Williamson, a senior Meadows adviser, denies he made the remark. According to sources, Kushner didn’t tell Meadows that Trump was promoting Bill Stepien to deputy campaign manager before it was announced last Tuesday. “Meadows had no idea about Stepien,” a source said. Williamson denies this.

With Trump escalating tensions with protesters, Republicans fear what comes next. “It’s spiraling out of control,” one person close to Mitch McConnell told me. “Everything went out the door yesterday,” a former West Wing official said. Trump, though, is now telling people he’s winning. “He thinks [Joe] Biden not condemning rioters will be Biden’s biggest mistake in appealing to suburban voters,” a Republican close to the White House said. “This has opened up new narratives in the campaign.”

He’s whining and crying that the protests are being manipulated by Democrats to make him look bad. He is an idiot. But the protests are about him — and all the other white supremacists who’ve perpetuated this racist system forever.

I have no doubt that he will try to appeal to white suburban voters with his racist rhetoric. Some wil no doubt agree with him. But whining and pulling stunts like his ridiculous photo-op yesterday aren’t going to help.

I don’t know what will happen, no one does. But there is a lot of water under the bridge with Trump at this point. Three and a half years of chaos and dysfunction have left him with no credibility and he has shown absolutely no ability to meet any crisis, including this one.

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