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Donald Trump is becoming trapped
Aug 2, 2017 20:13:07   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
By Michael Goodwin

July 29, 2017 | 9:09pm

Early last week, a friend who is generally supportive of President Trump offered his view that the president had only one move remaining — firing special counsel Robert Mueller.

By week’s end, my friend had a different view: The president is in a box without a clear escape hatch. “I’m not sure how he gets out of this,” he said wearily.

Those conversations bookend the worst week of the Trump presidency, which ended with another shake-up. By removing Reince Priebus as chief of staff and replacing him with Gen. John Kelly from Homeland Security, Trump aims to bring a semblance of military order and discipline to the White House.

Given Trump’s respect for Kelly, the move could mark an important turning point in focusing the president’s time and efforts. Too many days have been squandered by leaks and conflicting and even contradictory messages.

But to understand the complexity of Trump’s challenge and the limits of what Kelly can fix, it is useful to divide the president’s problems into two baskets.

The first basket includes the low moments of last week — the collapse of the ObamaCare repeal effort, Anthony Scaramucci’s profane attack on Priebus and Steve Bannon and the fact that Trump’s declaration of a ban on t*********rs serving in the military caught the Pentagon off guard.

Kelly, if Trump lets him, could fix or prevent all that.

Yet as significant as those events were, the problems in the second basket are potentially more serious. They center on the rupture between Trump and leading Republicans over Mueller and the president’s battering of Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Trump repeatedly calls the probe a “witch hunt” and has discussed firing Mueller, while most Republicans trust Mueller and are willing to let his investigation run its course.

Similarly, GOP leaders like and respect Sessions and believe Trump’s attacks on him are unfair. They don’t believe Sessions deserves to be fired.

One sign of the rupture came from Sen. Charles Grassley, chairman of the Judiciary committee, who said in a Wednesday tweet that the panel’s schedule is set for the year and there is no time to confirm a new attorney general.

The point was clear: Trump shouldn’t even think about firing Sessions.

The next day, Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina upped the ante, saying, “any effort to go after Mueller could be the beginning of the end of the Trump presidency unless Mueller did something wrong.”

He added that he will introduce legislation to block any attempts to fire the special counsel without judicial review — and said he was certain all Democrats and many Republicans would support him.

The sense that Trump is being curbed and isolated was bolstered when bi-partisan, veto-proof majorities in both houses agreed on legislation that requires congressional approval to lift the latest round of sanctions imposed on Russia. Until now, the president could unilaterally remove them.

Trump’s predicament recalls a scene in Ernest Hemingway’s novel, “The Sun Also Rises.”

“How did you go bankrupt,” one character asks another, who responds: “Two ways. Gradually, then suddenly.”

So it is with Trump. Problems, some of them self-inflicted, that looked temporary and manageable have been compounded over time and are reaching a crisis point. Most important, he is losing flexibility to act just as Mueller expands his probe into Trump’s business empire as well as his 2016 campaign.

Various reports say the special counsel, who is amassing a small army of prosecutors, is going through Trump’s career, including his taxes and property sales, to find any connections with Russians that might indicate collusion in the e******n.

I believe Trump is rattled by those reports and by the fact that one of his sons, Donald Trump Jr., and son-in-law Jared Kushner have been d**gged before congress; both also are likely to be summoned by Mueller.

I also believe Mueller’s aggressiveness helps explain Trump’s stepped-up attacks on Sessions, whose recusal led to Mueller’s appointment.

When Sessions, citing Justice Department regulations, stepped aside from any matter involving the 2016 campaign, he put the power in the hands of his deputy, Rod Rosenstein, who appointed Mueller after Trump fired FBI director James Comey.

More than a month ago, I urged Trump to replace Sessions so he could have someone to oversee Mueller and keep him from going beyond the initial assignment. But the revolt by the former Alabama’s Senator’s colleagues has blocked that path, and Sessions has rejected invitations to resign.

Hence, the conclusion that the president is trapped with no protection or escape from Mueller.

Trump, of course, has been counted out many times in the last two years, but always managed to bounce back. He could do it again because he retains enthusiastic support among most of those who v**ed for him, and less White House chaos and a big victory on tax reform could fuel another comeback.

As a bonus, strong public support would keep congressional Republicans in his corner.

But the uncertainty about where Mueller is going and what, if anything, he is finding adds a unique dimension to Trump’s troubles. That’s what makes this situation so perilous.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Michael Goodwin Is a NY Post columnist and a FOX NEWS contributor.

Reply
Aug 2, 2017 21:30:47   #
E
 
Mueller should be allowed to continue. But he should also look at the Democrat's various levels of collusion. Trump's is almost non-existent. Hilliary is another matter. And the last President isn't clean either.


cheers

Reply
Aug 2, 2017 21:39:14   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
I disagree 100%. I read the rule. Will try to find it. Mueller absolutely needs to go. In layman's terms the rule states the Special Prosecuter shouls have no close friends as witnesses. Add to this that he has hired Hillary's lawyer and Obama/Hillary doner's means this is a witch hunt pure and simple.
E wrote:
Mueller should be allowed to continue. But he should also look at the Democrat's various levels of collusion. Trump's is almost non-existent. Hilliary is another matter. And the last President isn't clean either.


cheers

Reply
 
 
Aug 2, 2017 21:57:11   #
E
 
I agree that is is a witch hunt. But I still think that he needs to go after all that colluded and follow the evidence, not CNN. And I believe the evidence will eventually point to all to much Democratic collusion.

But I do agree that he should have no friends as witnesses. And no lawyers that worked for or with Hilliary, or the last administration.

Reply
Aug 2, 2017 22:10:26   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
O.K., but if you truly agree then Mueller cannot be the SP. He and Comey are best friends and all he has hired are Democratic operatives.
E wrote:
I agree that is is a witch hunt. But I still think that he needs to go after all that colluded and follow the evidence, not CNN. And I believe the evidence will eventually point to all to much Democratic collusion.

But I do agree that he should have no friends as witnesses. And no lawyers that worked for or with Hilliary, or the last administration.

Reply
Aug 2, 2017 22:22:48   #
E
 
JFlorio wrote:
O.K., but if you truly agree then Mueller cannot be the SP. He and Comey are best friends and all he has hired are Democratic operatives.


If they are all Democrat operatives as you say, then he is abusing the position and Sessions should step up on that one. But the President needs to back off or he will again be made the bad guy. Just my opinion. I was mainly thinking of President Trump staying away from firing him and giving the wackadoodles more ammunition against him.

Reply
Aug 2, 2017 22:27:00   #
JFlorio Loc: Seminole Florida
 
In my opinion. By virtue of Sessions recusing himself and the assistant AG hiring Mueller Trump maybe screwed.
E wrote:
If they are all Democrat operatives as you say, then he is abusing the position and Sessions should step up on that one. But the President needs to back off or he will again be made the bad guy. Just my opinion. I was mainly thinking of President Trump staying away from firing him and giving the wackadoodles more ammunition against him.

Reply
 
 
Aug 2, 2017 22:28:29   #
E
 
JFlorio wrote:
In my opinion. By virtue of Sessions recusing himself and the assistant AG hiring Mueller Trump maybe screwed.


I agree.

Reply
Aug 2, 2017 23:20:48   #
Carol Kelly
 
JFlorio wrote:
I disagree 100%. I read the rule. Will try to find it. Mueller absolutely needs to go. In layman's terms the rule states the Special Prosecuter shouls have no close friends as witnesses. Add to this that he has hired Hillary's lawyer and Obama/Hillary doner's means this is a witch hunt pure and simple.


Mueller does need to go. He is biased in his views, but what is Trump to do. Slattens friend was right, Trump is in a box. Look at the hoopla over the firing of Comey and think what would happen if Trump fired the €#}¥Mueller. The Democrats(think Socialists) would shout that it was an admission of guilt from Trump. No way Mueller will run an unbiased investigation. Anytime the Democrats think someone is a fine, upright fellow, watch out.

Reply
Aug 2, 2017 23:22:23   #
Carol Kelly
 
JFlorio wrote:
O.K., but if you truly agree then Mueller cannot be the SP. He and Comey are best friends and all he has hired are Democratic operatives.


All too true.

Reply
Aug 2, 2017 23:47:45   #
Sicilianthing
 
slatten49 wrote:
By Michael Goodwin

July 29, 2017 | 9:09pm

Early last week, a friend who is generally supportive of President Trump offered his view that the president had only one move remaining — firing special counsel Robert Mueller.

By week’s end, my friend had a different view: The president is in a box without a clear escape hatch. “I’m not sure how he gets out of this,” he said wearily.

Those conversations bookend the worst week of the Trump presidency, which ended with another shake-up. By removing Reince Priebus as chief of staff and replacing him with Gen. John Kelly from Homeland Security, Trump aims to bring a semblance of military order and discipline to the White House.

Given Trump’s respect for Kelly, the move could mark an important turning point in focusing the president’s time and efforts. Too many days have been squandered by leaks and conflicting and even contradictory messages.

But to understand the complexity of Trump’s challenge and the limits of what Kelly can fix, it is useful to divide the president’s problems into two baskets.

The first basket includes the low moments of last week — the collapse of the ObamaCare repeal effort, Anthony Scaramucci’s profane attack on Priebus and Steve Bannon and the fact that Trump’s declaration of a ban on t*********rs serving in the military caught the Pentagon off guard.

Kelly, if Trump lets him, could fix or prevent all that.

Yet as significant as those events were, the problems in the second basket are potentially more serious. They center on the rupture between Trump and leading Republicans over Mueller and the president’s battering of Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Trump repeatedly calls the probe a “witch hunt” and has discussed firing Mueller, while most Republicans trust Mueller and are willing to let his investigation run its course.

Similarly, GOP leaders like and respect Sessions and believe Trump’s attacks on him are unfair. They don’t believe Sessions deserves to be fired.

One sign of the rupture came from Sen. Charles Grassley, chairman of the Judiciary committee, who said in a Wednesday tweet that the panel’s schedule is set for the year and there is no time to confirm a new attorney general.

The point was clear: Trump shouldn’t even think about firing Sessions.

The next day, Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina upped the ante, saying, “any effort to go after Mueller could be the beginning of the end of the Trump presidency unless Mueller did something wrong.”

He added that he will introduce legislation to block any attempts to fire the special counsel without judicial review — and said he was certain all Democrats and many Republicans would support him.

The sense that Trump is being curbed and isolated was bolstered when bi-partisan, veto-proof majorities in both houses agreed on legislation that requires congressional approval to lift the latest round of sanctions imposed on Russia. Until now, the president could unilaterally remove them.

Trump’s predicament recalls a scene in Ernest Hemingway’s novel, “The Sun Also Rises.”

“How did you go bankrupt,” one character asks another, who responds: “Two ways. Gradually, then suddenly.”

So it is with Trump. Problems, some of them self-inflicted, that looked temporary and manageable have been compounded over time and are reaching a crisis point. Most important, he is losing flexibility to act just as Mueller expands his probe into Trump’s business empire as well as his 2016 campaign.

Various reports say the special counsel, who is amassing a small army of prosecutors, is going through Trump’s career, including his taxes and property sales, to find any connections with Russians that might indicate collusion in the e******n.

I believe Trump is rattled by those reports and by the fact that one of his sons, Donald Trump Jr., and son-in-law Jared Kushner have been d**gged before congress; both also are likely to be summoned by Mueller.

I also believe Mueller’s aggressiveness helps explain Trump’s stepped-up attacks on Sessions, whose recusal led to Mueller’s appointment.

When Sessions, citing Justice Department regulations, stepped aside from any matter involving the 2016 campaign, he put the power in the hands of his deputy, Rod Rosenstein, who appointed Mueller after Trump fired FBI director James Comey.

More than a month ago, I urged Trump to replace Sessions so he could have someone to oversee Mueller and keep him from going beyond the initial assignment. But the revolt by the former Alabama’s Senator’s colleagues has blocked that path, and Sessions has rejected invitations to resign.

Hence, the conclusion that the president is trapped with no protection or escape from Mueller.

Trump, of course, has been counted out many times in the last two years, but always managed to bounce back. He could do it again because he retains enthusiastic support among most of those who v**ed for him, and less White House chaos and a big victory on tax reform could fuel another comeback.

As a bonus, strong public support would keep congressional Republicans in his corner.

But the uncertainty about where Mueller is going and what, if anything, he is finding adds a unique dimension to Trump’s troubles. That’s what makes this situation so perilous.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Michael Goodwin Is a NY Post columnist and a FOX NEWS contributor.
By Michael Goodwin br br July 29, 2017 | 9:09pm b... (show quote)



>>>>>

Hmmm

Reply
 
 
Aug 3, 2017 08:11:03   #
lpnmajor Loc: Arkansas
 
slatten49 wrote:
By Michael Goodwin

July 29, 2017 | 9:09pm

Early last week, a friend who is generally supportive of President Trump offered his view that the president had only one move remaining — firing special counsel Robert Mueller.

By week’s end, my friend had a different view: The president is in a box without a clear escape hatch. “I’m not sure how he gets out of this,” he said wearily.

Those conversations bookend the worst week of the Trump presidency, which ended with another shake-up. By removing Reince Priebus as chief of staff and replacing him with Gen. John Kelly from Homeland Security, Trump aims to bring a semblance of military order and discipline to the White House.

Given Trump’s respect for Kelly, the move could mark an important turning point in focusing the president’s time and efforts. Too many days have been squandered by leaks and conflicting and even contradictory messages.

But to understand the complexity of Trump’s challenge and the limits of what Kelly can fix, it is useful to divide the president’s problems into two baskets.

The first basket includes the low moments of last week — the collapse of the ObamaCare repeal effort, Anthony Scaramucci’s profane attack on Priebus and Steve Bannon and the fact that Trump’s declaration of a ban on t*********rs serving in the military caught the Pentagon off guard.

Kelly, if Trump lets him, could fix or prevent all that.

Yet as significant as those events were, the problems in the second basket are potentially more serious. They center on the rupture between Trump and leading Republicans over Mueller and the president’s battering of Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Trump repeatedly calls the probe a “witch hunt” and has discussed firing Mueller, while most Republicans trust Mueller and are willing to let his investigation run its course.

Similarly, GOP leaders like and respect Sessions and believe Trump’s attacks on him are unfair. They don’t believe Sessions deserves to be fired.

One sign of the rupture came from Sen. Charles Grassley, chairman of the Judiciary committee, who said in a Wednesday tweet that the panel’s schedule is set for the year and there is no time to confirm a new attorney general.

The point was clear: Trump shouldn’t even think about firing Sessions.

The next day, Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina upped the ante, saying, “any effort to go after Mueller could be the beginning of the end of the Trump presidency unless Mueller did something wrong.”

He added that he will introduce legislation to block any attempts to fire the special counsel without judicial review — and said he was certain all Democrats and many Republicans would support him.

The sense that Trump is being curbed and isolated was bolstered when bi-partisan, veto-proof majorities in both houses agreed on legislation that requires congressional approval to lift the latest round of sanctions imposed on Russia. Until now, the president could unilaterally remove them.

Trump’s predicament recalls a scene in Ernest Hemingway’s novel, “The Sun Also Rises.”

“How did you go bankrupt,” one character asks another, who responds: “Two ways. Gradually, then suddenly.”

So it is with Trump. Problems, some of them self-inflicted, that looked temporary and manageable have been compounded over time and are reaching a crisis point. Most important, he is losing flexibility to act just as Mueller expands his probe into Trump’s business empire as well as his 2016 campaign.

Various reports say the special counsel, who is amassing a small army of prosecutors, is going through Trump’s career, including his taxes and property sales, to find any connections with Russians that might indicate collusion in the e******n.

I believe Trump is rattled by those reports and by the fact that one of his sons, Donald Trump Jr., and son-in-law Jared Kushner have been d**gged before congress; both also are likely to be summoned by Mueller.

I also believe Mueller’s aggressiveness helps explain Trump’s stepped-up attacks on Sessions, whose recusal led to Mueller’s appointment.

When Sessions, citing Justice Department regulations, stepped aside from any matter involving the 2016 campaign, he put the power in the hands of his deputy, Rod Rosenstein, who appointed Mueller after Trump fired FBI director James Comey.

More than a month ago, I urged Trump to replace Sessions so he could have someone to oversee Mueller and keep him from going beyond the initial assignment. But the revolt by the former Alabama’s Senator’s colleagues has blocked that path, and Sessions has rejected invitations to resign.

Hence, the conclusion that the president is trapped with no protection or escape from Mueller.

Trump, of course, has been counted out many times in the last two years, but always managed to bounce back. He could do it again because he retains enthusiastic support among most of those who v**ed for him, and less White House chaos and a big victory on tax reform could fuel another comeback.

As a bonus, strong public support would keep congressional Republicans in his corner.

But the uncertainty about where Mueller is going and what, if anything, he is finding adds a unique dimension to Trump’s troubles. That’s what makes this situation so perilous.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Michael Goodwin Is a NY Post columnist and a FOX NEWS contributor.
By Michael Goodwin br br July 29, 2017 | 9:09pm b... (show quote)


Trump's newest reality show will probably not get a contract for another season.

Reply
Aug 3, 2017 08:16:54   #
slatten49 Loc: Lake Whitney, Texas
 
Carol Kelly wrote:
Mueller does need to go. He is biased in his views, but what is Trump to do. Slattens friend was right, Trump is in a box. Look at the hoopla over the firing of Comey and think what would happen if Trump fired the €#}¥Mueller. The Democrats(think Socialists) would shout that it was an admission of guilt from Trump. No way Mueller will run an unbiased investigation. Anytime the Democrats think someone is a fine, upright fellow, watch out.

"Slatten's friend " Goodwin may well be right, but I don't know the man from Adam. It's just a NY Post column pulled off the internet.

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