Donald Trump letting Steve Bannon know who is boss
US PRESIDENT Donald Trumpās message in recent days to his chief strategist, Stephen Bannon, was hard to misunderstand: Iām president and youāre not.
Trumpās policy decisions last week sharply departed from Bannonās nationalist āAmerica Firstā ideology, and the presidentās cutting remarks to the press, downplaying Bannonās role in the White House, led to questions about the adviserās future in the administration.
At a news conference on Wednesday, at which Bannon sat in the front row, Trump touted an expansion of Nato, though Bannon is a skeptic of the alliance. The same day, Trump told the Wall Street Journal he wouldnāt declare China a currency manipulator ā breaking a major campaign promise ā backed the US Export-Import Bank and continued low interest rates, and said he might keep Federal Reserve chair, Janet Yellen, in her job, after her term expires next year.
Those moves, and Trumpās cruise-missile strike on Syria last week, appear to conflict with the populist ideals of his chief strategist. They came a week after infighting between Bannon and Trumpās son-in-law, Jared Kushner, spilled into public. Kushner is a centrist whose influence with Trump is growing, and this intensified speculation in Washington that Bannonās role may be diminished or that he may even be on his way out of the White House.
This article is based on interviews with 10 White House officials, Trump advisers, and Republican strategists, who insisted on anonymity to speak candidly. Bannon didnāt respond to a request for comment.
For weeks, people close to Trump have blamed Bannon for the chaos and distractions that have marred the administrationās early days, and have expressed concern about his influence. Trump reportedly bristled at magazine covers and late-night comedians who have depicted Bannon as the presidentās puppeteer.

Gary Cohn, the presidentās top economic adviser, along with treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin, and commerce secretary, Wilbur Ross, have sought greater influence and a reordering of priorities within the White House. One lobbyist said Ross told him to disregard Bannonās anti-trade rhetoric.
Still, Bannonās place in the inner circle would likely have been secure had it not been for his dust-up with Kushner.
Trump values family above all else, those close to him say, and Bannonās fighting with Kushner could have created an irreconcilable divide. One senior administration official said itās widely understood that the last two standing in the White House will be Kushner and Trumpās daughter, Ivanka Trump. Any spat with either of them is particularly treacherous.
Another senior White House official said that Bannon and Kushner met last week to resolve their differences and that this was at the urging of chief of staff, Reince Priebus.
One long-time friend of Trumpās said he had never seen Trump criticise an employee publicly like he did Bannon this week. Trump told the New York Post that āIām my own strategist,ā and said he had told Bannon and his adversaries, whom he didnāt name, āto straighten it out or I will.ā
In the Journal interview, Trump described Bannon as āa guy who works for meā. Bannonās allies argue that there were sound reasons for Trumpās policy swings, but he has had an especially bad recent stretch, beginning with his removal from the principals committee of the National Security Council, on April 4, the first official sign of Trumpās discontent.
In a rare move, Trump left Bannon, and the rest of his senior staff, behind in Washington on Thursday, as he headed off for a long weekend with his family at his Palm Beach estate.
Since August, Bannon has been an entrenched figure in Trumpās inner circle, wielding influence over every decision. A Harvard Business School-educated, ex-Goldman Sachs Group investment banker and ex-movie producer, Bannon opposes the forces of globalisation and envisions a new political order hinged on working-class populism.
He has influenced almost all executive orders Trump has signed so far, and has found purchase with the president on plans to vastly scale back the US regulatory regime and the governmentās bureaucracy, said Tim Miller, a partner at Definers Public Affairs and a former Jeb Bush aide.
Trumpās energy is with the Bannon wing of his party, Miller said.
āEventually heās going to have to return to the policies and tactics that appeal to his core supporters. Dance with the one who brung ya,ā Miller said.
While Trumpās policies may eventually shift back in line with Bannonās world view, itās unclear whether Bannon himself will still be advising him, said two people familiar with the presidentās thinking.
Two administration officials sought to downplay the tensions between Kushner and Bannon, and said they didnāt expect near-term changes in Bannonās role, which they described as that of an adviser focused on helping Trump carry through on campaign promises.

These officials said Bannonās influence has been overstated, pointing out that many of the presidentās ideas on trade, immigration, and the economy were formed before Bannon joined the campaign.
In meetings, it is the president who makes the final decision and Bannon doesnāt carry any more weight than other top advisers, the officials said. They also echoed Trumpās statements, earlier this week, saying Bannon doesnāt deserve much credit for helping the president win.
Another Republican strategist said he expects Bannon to continue to fall out of proximity to Trump, to be excluded from meetings and that, eventually, he will leave to work for an outside group ā potentially the political action committee run by Rebekah Mercer, a daughter of hedge fund manager, Robert Mercer. She has become an influential player in Donald Trumpās administration and is Bannonās political patron.
A group of 56 House Democrats sent a letter to Trump on Thursday, calling for the president to remove Bannon from the White House, citing what they said were his anti-government views.
āHis ideology and political agenda clearly have no place in the White House,ā they wrote.
Bloomberg





