Saturday, June 27, 2026

The White House struggles to silence talk of Trump’s mental fitness

January 9, 2018 by  
Filed under Latest Lingerie News

Comments Off

The White House is struggling to contain the national discussion about President Trump’s mental acuity and fitness for the job, which has overshadowed the administration’s agenda for the past week.

Trump publicly waded into the debate spawned by a new book, “Fire and Fury” — Michael Wolff’s inside account of the presidency — over the weekend by claiming on Twitter that he is “like, really smart” and “a very stable genius.” In doing so, the president underscored his administration’s response strategy — by being forceful and combative — while also undermining it by gleefully entering a debate his aides have tried to avoid.

Trump privately resents the now-regular chatter on cable television news shows about his mental health and views the issue as “an invented fact” and “a joke,” much like the Russia probe, according to one person who recently discussed it with him.

Doubts about Trump’s state of mind have been whispered about in Washington’s corridors of power since before he was elected and have occasionally broken into the open, such as when Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) said last August that Trump lacked “the stability” and “some of the competence” to be successful as president.

But Wolff’s book has thrust the topic to the forefront of public debate, prompting the White House to confront the issue directly.

A video of President Trump making remarks is played on dual screens in the White House briefing room as press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders waits to talk to reporters on Thursday. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

So far, Trump’s advisers have adopted a posture of umbrage and indignation. Rather than dignifying questions about whether their 71-year-old boss is fit to be president, they attack the inquisitors for having the gall to ask.

In an emailed statement Monday, White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders slammed what she called “ridiculous reports from detractors” and described an “outpouring of support from a totally indignant staff.”

“The White House perspective is outrage and disgust that people who do not know this President or understand the true depth of his intellectual capabilities would be so filled with hate they would resort to something so far outside the realm of reality or decency,” she said.

Asked Monday by reporters whether Trump’s physical exam, scheduled for Friday at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, would include a psychiatric component, deputy White House press secretary Hogan Gidley barely engaged the question. He replied, simply, “No.”

Former Trump campaign adviser Jason Miller charged that there were partisan motivations behind the talk of Trump’s fitness. “The political left wants this to become a debate about made-up attacks against the president rather than the president’s successes and the success of the country,” he said. “This is a pretty pathetic move.”

White House officials are trying to present Trump as hard at work doing his job. A long-planned working retreat at Camp David over the weekend became a showcase for the commander in chief.

White House chief of staff John F. Kelly watches as President Trump speaks during a meeting with lawmakers at the White House last month. (Salwan Georges/The Washington Post)

The traveling pool of reporters was invited to the presidential getaway in Maryland, where Trump parried their questions Saturday while Vice President Pence, Cabinet members and Republican congressional leaders flanked him with approving nods and applause.

“Just from a visual standpoint, it shows a very united front,” one White House official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share an internal assessment, said of the Camp David news conference. “Everyone’s on the same page. There are no fractures. From an optics standpoint, it works very well.”

Scott Reed, a veteran Republican strategist who works for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said Trump can best help extinguish emerging doubts by advancing his policy agenda, including proposals for new spending on infrastructure projects. “This needs to move beyond talking heads and be met with action and discipline,” Reed said.

U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley also fired back against critics on ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday, emphasizing the president’s accomplishments rather than his state of mind.

“As much as everyone wants to talk about stability, was he unstable when he passed the tax reform?” she asked. “Was he unstable when we finally hit back at Syria and said no more chemical weapons? Was he unstable when we finally put North Korea on notice? Was he unstable when he said, ‘Wait, we need to look at Iran because this is getting to be a dangerous situation’? Was he unstable with the jobs or the economy or the stock market?”

But Monday, as Trump delivered a speech on agriculture policy in Nashville, neither CNN nor MSNBC carried his full remarks live. Instead, anchors Jake Tapper and Nicolle Wallace, respectively, interviewed journalists and pundits about Wolff’s book and Trump’s reaction to it.

Some Trump allies voiced frustration that the White House does not appear to have implemented a full-scale crisis communications plan.

“When you raise an issue like the mental acuity of the president, there is no organized effort to push back,” said one ally, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk candidly. “How do you disprove a fallacy?”

After several days of blanket coverage of Wolff’s book, the Republican National Committee sent some talking points to Trump allies Friday evening. The memo, titled “Pundit Prep,” urged Trump’s defenders to first focus on “jobs, jobs, jobs,” and offered tips on discrediting Wolff and his tome. The document did not address how to answer questions about Trump’s fitness for office.

White House officials said organizing a public response has been relatively easy, as administration aides and allies have been naturally frustrated and eager to push back. A number of Cabinet members and other people who have worked closely with Trump over the years have come forward with testimonies of the president’s mental capacity.

“He is absolutely no different than the day he got elected, and he has used this unconventional but very effective manner of managing for the 30 years that I’ve known him in business, finance, media and now governing,” Thomas J. Barrack Jr., Trump’s longtime friend and inauguration chairman, said in an interview Monday.

“It’s not mental instability,” Barrack added. “It’s management by controlled and orchestrated chaos.”

Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said Monday on Hugh Hewitt’s radio show that his boss is “focused, he’s determined, he’s a business guy. He asks tough questions, and expects solid answers.”

When Hewitt asked if Trump was “really smart,” as the president claimed in his tweet, Perdue replied: “I think he is really smart. He’s instinctive. He has a unique, inherent gift of just being able to figure stuff out. It’s like street smarts.”

CIA Director Mike Pompeo, appearing Sunday on CBS’s “Face the Nation,” talked about Trump’s engagement during the near-daily intelligence briefings that Pompeo helps deliver.

“We engage in complex conversation about some of the most weighty matters facing the world,” Pompeo said, adding: “He asks really hard questions. He delivers policy outcomes based on the information that we provide him.”

A more combative defense came from Stephen Miller, Trump’s senior policy adviser, who tangled with Tapper on Sunday on CNN’s “State of the Union.” Miller trashed Wolff as “a garbage author of a garbage book.”

“One of the other tragedies of this grotesque work of fiction is its portrayal of the president,” Miller said. “The reality is, is the president is a political genius.”

As Miller repeated himself again and again, he and Tapper began talking over each other, and the interview grew so contentious that the CNN host eventually cut it — and Miller — off.

Afterward, Miller was delighted. He told others he was proud of his performance and thought the exchange went well. So did the president, who chimed in with Twitter praise, saying his policy adviser had “destroyed” the “Fake News” Tapper.

Josh Dawsey contributed to this report.

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS

Alabama was dead, Nick Saban buried … until his freshmen resurrected the Tide

January 9, 2018 by  
Filed under Latest Lingerie News

Comments Off

ATLANTA — It was dead, Alabama as a whole. Or at least it looked that way. Ah, but inside the most talented roster in the sport, they were young, too.

So young that Alabama’s freshmen in the incredible 26-23 overtime victory against Georgia in the 2018 College Football Playoff National Championship perhaps didn’t know they were supposed to play dead.

When true freshman receiver DeVonta Smith caught a 41-yard pass from true freshman Tua Tagovailoa to clinch Nick Saban’s sixth national championship … well, there wasn’t much analysis.

Just paralysis, the kind that comes when the jaw drops open and no sound comes out.

The kind that comes when teammates look at each other and say, “Did that just happen?” It did and it will live forever.

“When they called the play, I looked at Tua and I said, ‘Trust me,’ ” shared wide receiver DeVonta Smith on the field immediately after the game.

Asked the specific play that launched Nick Saban to his record-tying sixth national championship, left tackle Alex Leatherwood, another true freshman, said: “I don’t even know. I was blocking my ass off.”

That was topped by Saban himself, who said on camera after a rally from 13 points down, “I’ve never been happier in my life.”

That should be confusingly good news to his children and loyal wife Miss Terry. For the rest of the Crimson Tide world, perhaps this tops them all.

Five of the six Saban championships — the total ties him with legendary Paul “Bear” Bryant — have been won at Alabama. But none like this. This one came after it looked like Georgia was not only Cinderella but better.

The Bulldogs were up 13-0 at half when Saban subbed Tagovailoa in for sophomore starter Jalen Hurts. The freshman had seen mop up work in eight games. In four SEC games, he had been inserted where the cumulative Alabama advantage was 142-6.

All the Hawaiian did was lead the Tide back from a 20-7 deficit, tying the game at 20 with a pass to Calvin Ridley with 3:21 left in regulation.

A tale of Tua quarterbacks?

Following Andy Pappanastos’ second missed field goal, this one kicked as the final seconds ticked away in the fourth quarter, Alabama was down again 23-20 in overtime before the freshmen struck their final blow.

By that point, Saban had inserted a freshman at quarterback, a freshman at tailback — former No 1 recruit Najee Harris — and another at left tackle (Leatherwood) as an injury replacement for Jonah Williams.

The leading receiver for the game, Henry Ruggs III, was another freshman. Tagovailoa was the leading passer. Harris was the leading rusher. Smith had the most receiving yards. Ruggs caught the most passes.

Top that.

“I don’t think we ever have,” Saban said.

This was the Kick Six in reverse, mostly because Alabama won this shocker. This was satisfaction for last year’s last-second loss to Clemson in the CFP National Championship.

This made Saban’s onside kick call two years against the Tigers look absolutely sane.

The result also bailed out Pappanastos. He can not only show his face again in Tuscaloosa, now he can laugh off those two misses. The last one — a chip-shot 36-yarder right down the middle — hooked wide left at the end of regulation.

“Everyone, the whole of the offensive linemen, came up and hugged me [when] I missed,” he said. “I’ve just been hooking it a little bit. It’s like a golf shot.”

Smith had been a regular backup all season when he was sent on a streak up the left side on second-and-26 from Alabama’s 41. It was the eighth catch of his career.

Keeping with the theme, offensive coordinator Brian Daboll couldn’t describe the game-winning play either.

Who could blame him? In the space of 11 months, he had won two championships — one with Tom Brady, the other with a true freshman college quarterback.

The Patriots were down by 25 to the Falcons. The Tide were down to their last freshman — or so it seemed.

Both of those championships were won in overtime after incredible comebacks with Daboll’s team never leading prior to the final play.

“It’s the philosophy I grew up with under [Bill] Belichick,” said Daboll, New England’s former tight ends coach. “Next man up, ready to go, no excuses.”

The dichotomy of a 66-year-old legend in Saban putting his comeback on the backs of true freshmen added to the drama.

“I trust players,” Saban said. “Players that do things the right way. Players who prepare the right way, practice the right way. They’re dependable.”

At Georgia, they’re also the reason Kirby Smart is going to have to wait a bit longer for his first title. Saban assistants are 0-12 against their former boss.

It wasn’t the first time Smart choked off and ground down an SEC opponent with a comfortable second-half lead. It was the first time Smart choked off and ground down Saban. Until in a second-half flourish, Alabama might have become that Cinderella.

So much for questioners of the CFP doubting whether this intraconference battle would turn off televisions all over the country.

It was at least the best CFP game in a week.

Try to ride the emotional roller coaster Georgia has been on. The Dawgs beat Oklahoma in a shootout in the Rose Bowl semifinal and then, in a lot of ways, shot themselves in the foot.

“A lot of people didn’t think we deserved to be here,” tailback Damien Harris said. “We’re the kings of college football right now.”

A bit more than a month ago, some folks — especially in the Big Ten — were questioning Alabama’s worthiness.

Now the Tide have five of the past nine championships. Those freshmen are only getting started. They have their first.

“I’m part of history,” Ridley, a junior, said. “We’re part of history.”

Share and Enjoy

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • LinkedIn
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS