Trump Rants While Democrats Lay Down the Law

The president’s angry public statements offer a stark contrast to Pelosi and Schiff’s response.

He called his Democratic investigators liars and traitors, deemed his potential 2020 campaign foe and son “stone cold crooked” and said the impeachment inquiry against him was “BULLSHIT.” They said grimly that they would go through the legal process of subpoenaing the White House for documents and noted their obligation to “give the president a chance to exonerate himself.”

He called the press “corrupt” and lambasted a reporter who asked what, if anything, the president wanted a foreign nation to do regarding Democratic presidential hopeful Joe Biden and his son, Hunter, demanding that the reporter ask a question of the Finnish president instead – and then answered the question posed to the befuddled-looking Finnish leader. They pleaded lightly for questions about free trade and prescription drug costs before agreeing to answer questions about the impeachment probe.

He threatened a “major lawsuit” against those behind special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation of interference in the 2016 election – a probe he insists absolves him of wrongdoing. They solemnly warned the president that failure to cooperate with subpoenas would be viewed as obstruction of justice, in itself an impeachable offense.

View the complete October 2 article by Susan Milligan on The U.S. News and World Report website here.

Inside Trump’s shutdown turnaround

President Trump departs the Rose Garden of the White House after announcing the end of the government shutdown on Friday. Credit: Jabin Botsford, The Washington Post

His poll numbers were plummeting. His FBI director was decrying the dysfunction. The nation’s air travel was in chaos. Federal workers were lining up at food banks. Economic growth was at risk of flatlining, and even some Republican senators were in open revolt.

So on Friday, the 35th day of a government shutdown that he said he was proud to instigate, President Trump finally folded. After vowing for weeks that he would keep the government closed unless he secured billions in funding for his promised border wall, Trump agreed to reopen it.

He got $0 instead.

View the complete January 25 article by Philip Rucker, Josh Dawsey and Seung Min Kim on The Washington Post website here.

A ‘pressure cooker’: Trump’s frustration and fury rupture alliances, threaten agenda

The following article by Robert Costa, Philip Rucker and Ashley Parker was posted on the Washington Post website October 9, 2017:

Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) called the White House “an adult day care center,” but he isn’t the only senator who has questioned President Trump’s temperament. (Video: Bastien Inzaurralde/Photo: Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

Frustrated by his Cabinet and angry that he has not received enough credit for his handling of three successive hurricanes, President Trump is now lashing out, rupturing alliances and imperiling his legislative agenda, numerous White House officials and outside advisers said Monday.

In a matter of days, Trump has torched bridges all around him, nearly imploded an informal deal with Democrats to protect young undocumented immigrants brought to the country as children, and plunged himself into the culture wars on issues ranging from birth control to the national anthem. Continue reading “A ‘pressure cooker’: Trump’s frustration and fury rupture alliances, threaten agenda”