We finally have answers. Perhaps more importantly, something about the
Trump Administration finally makes sense. Credit Michael Wolff, author of Fire
and Fury, which is a peek under the short skirt of the Trump Administration
(yes, I tweaked the metaphor on purpose). Wolff's work provided so many insights
and answers to questions I can't be the only one asking.
(I devoured this book in three days that has to be a personal record.)
Wolff has been doing the talk show circuit for at least a week now. I ordered
my copy of the book based on Wolff's Today Show interview and a
Newsweek article a "top ten list" of topics covered in Fire and
Fury's salacious 321 pages.
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Fire and Fury
Fire and Fury delivered for me the "ground zero" answer to all of my
questions about the Trump Administration over the past year: Winning the race was
never Donald Trump's intention.
With Wolff's help, I've been led to conclude, by piecing together content from
the book with other news I'd picked up over the
past year and a half, that the whole thing was about developing a
message that Trump could later broadcast over a media company. In short, Trump's
candidacy was step one of a two step program: (1) create a message (2) make a network
to broadcast that message. The program was taken straight from the playbook of Roger
Ailes, the disgraced former Chairman and CEO of Fox News who resigned in
mid-2016 amid sexual harrassment allegations. Both Ailes and Rupert Murdoch, Wolff
explains, are held in very high esteem at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue though for Murdoch,
the feeling was not entirely mutual.
Trump's longtime friend Roger Ailes liked to say that if you wanted a career
in television, first run for president. Now Trump, encouraged by Ailes, was
floating rumors about a Trump network. It was a great future.
He would come out of this campaign, Trump assured Ailes, with a far more
powerful brand and untold opportunties. "This is bigger than I ever dreamed of,"
he told Ailes in a conversation a week before the election. "I don't think about
losing because it isn't losing. We've totally won."
The answer to just about any question one might ask about the Trump Administration
can be traced back to that paragraph. Example: Why, particularly early on, why did
the Trump Administration appear to be in complete disarray? Because they made no plans
for becoming an actual Administration. Team Trump planned to lose the election.
Another example: Why did Candidate Trump refuse to release his tax returns to the public?
Because Team Trump planned to lose the election. Then-candidate Trump knew
the entire furor would become entirely moot after Election Day.
Fire and Fury does three things very well: It offers insight into
our enigmatic 45th president (and how the White House staff learned to shape
information for him); it offers insight into the events that shaped the first
year of the Trump Administration, from catalysts to reactions; and, perhaps
most importantly, it offers insight into different factions within the White
House who were constantly fighting for the president's favor.
Three Factions
To the final point above: three parties with different interests were all working feverishly
to further their own agendas through President Trump: Steve Bannon, who was advocating
for the no-quarter nationalist approach (Wolff refers to this as "Trumpism-Bannonism":
an "iron-fisted isolationism"); Reince Priebus, who was working to further the
interests of the Republican Party; and Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump, who were pushing
hard against Bannon for moderation, pushing for causes Bannon considered "off-message,"
and to generally mold 45 into a more presidential image.
As the events of 2017 unfolded, Wolff gave us the three sides to every story
including how each side tailored their messages, and the players each recruited to
bend the president's ear and hold his attention enough to communicate it (for
example, Camp Kushner was using Joe Scarborough of Fox Network's Morning Joe,
playing to the president's addiction to television). And it seems
every topic was a battle; every day, a grueling war for virtual control of
the United States and its place in the world.
Numerous newsworthy events were engineered by at least one of the three camps,
Wolff explains. For example, the firing of FBI Director James Comey was engineered
by Kushner, because Kushner's family business dealings were getting exposed as
part of the Russia investigation. (Interestingly, Bannon urged against firing Comey
because news coverage of the investigation would instantly become front-page material
but also perhaps partly because he'd had his fill of Kushner.) Kushner then went to
great lengths to deny any involvement in the decision.
Wolff walks us through many such events using the introduction of each actor and
how they came to participate to set the stage, followed by the event and the
reactions by each camp. Many of these events involving a given camp only became
events because word was leaked by one of the other camps for example, much of the
trouble Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump were in was preceded by some action from an
agent of either Bannon or Priebus or both.
At times the book reads like the latest installment of the Star Wars saga
(*cue John Williams*):
If no text shows after a few seconds, right-click on the black field and refresh.
Episode VIII
A New Administration
Snokish Bannon's objective is to hone, use, and fully occupy Trump,
raw and unwise in the ways of national politics, and eager for
attention.
The rebellion, under direction of Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump,
is desperate to manage Trump toward more liberal causes, under the
watchful eye of Bannon and Reince Priebus, whose Republicans have
control of the senate.
Bannon thrills at every action Trump takes against the liberal agenda
(the Paris Climate Agreement, for example), crushing the rebellion
and bringing Trump ever closer to becoming irrevocably
enveloped in Bannon's black-hearted nationalism...
Credit: css-tricks.com
Pity the Fool
In truth, Fire and Fury has ultimately made me pity our president.
I'm angry that he ran in the first place (because he had no intention of winning);
he should have found some other way to craft a message without making a promise
he never intended to keep. I'm angry about the things he did under Bannon's
influence, and I'm angry about the hijinx the Republicans have been doing
in Congress (like voting on important bills the Democrats had no chance to read).
But ultimately, the book has shown that Mr. Trump has been a pawn the entire time.
Everyone around him learned the one thing he craved most was adoration, and so
all used flattery to their advantage to get him to do what they wanted.
Looking to the Future
Look where this could leave us. We have a president that entered the race
for himself not for the good of the country. All he wanted was a media
presence. Now he's the Commander in Chief, and, as Wolff helps illustrate, the
issues facing the country don't interest him. Hell, reading doesn't
interest him. The ONE thing in those 321 pages he really seemed to give any kind
of a damn about was the use of chemical weapons in Syria and only because
Ivanka was smart enough to put together a CARE-esque preso and made him watch it.
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As was stated in the book, "He doesn't give a fuck." (That's a quote not my
words.) He doesn't care about you. Or your family. Or your health care. Or your
taxes. He cares about himself, television, his image on television golf,
and cheeseburgers. Everything else is a pain in his ass (which I think is also
at least close to another quote from the book).
I encourage all Americans to read this book but particularly those who
voted for President Trump. Read it and really think about how our political
process should function and what you can do to prevent this from happening again
in the future.