
Donald Trump has been in a funk since midterm elections that saw the Democrats seize control of the House of Representatives, ending the Republicans’ dominance of both chambers of Congress
An angry Donald Trump pushed out a senior advisor Wednesday after First Lady Melania Trump demanded her sacking, with more heads set to roll in a White House reshuffle triggered by infighting and setbacks in the midterm elections.
Melania Trump made the extremely rare demand for deputy national security advisor Mira Ricardel to be fired on Tuesday, saying “she no longer deserves the honor of serving in this White House.”
His position, tenuous for months, has been undermined further by reports that he also clashed with Melania Trump — a relatively backstage first lady who has rarely made her influence so obviously felt as this week.
Melania Trump was angry that Kelly had refused to promote some of her aides, reports say.
Nick Ayers, a 36-year-old chief of staff to Vice President Mike Pence and renowned political consultant, is reportedly high on the list to replace Kelly.
Another expected reshuffle casualty is Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, a Kelly ally who oversees the politically sensitive task of carrying out Trump’s crackdown on illegal immigration.
Trump told The Daily Caller he’ll make “a decision on homeland shortly.”
Among Nielsen’s critics has been National Security Adviser John Bolton, who last month was widely reported to have erupted in a shouting match with Kelly right outside the Oval Office over her performance.
Donald Trump has been in a funk since last week’s midterms which saw Democrats seize control of the House of Representatives, ending the Republicans’ dominance of both chambers of Congress.
While the Republicans held their Senate majority, the Democratic win means the president will for the first time face an opposition that has teeth.
Democrats vow to use their control of powerful House oversight committees to go after Trump’s nebulous personal finances and to protect an explosive probe into whether his 2016 election campaign colluded with Russian agents.
Pressure is mounting from the probe, as the special counsel Robert Mueller digs ever more deeply into the president’s inner circle.
When Trump suddenly replaced his attorney general Jeff Sessions last week with a fierce critic of the Russia investigation, Matthew Whitaker, critics accused him of violating the constitution.
The Department of Justice ruled on Wednesday that Whitaker’s appointment is in fact constitutional, but this will do little to calm claims that Trump’s real goal is to defang the Russia probe, which he describes as “a witch hunt.”
Abroad, there’s no respite for the real estate billionaire either.
A weekend trip to Paris for World War I commemorations was marred by a row with President Emmanuel Macron. Trump mockingly referred to Germany’s invasions of France during the two world wars, while also berating America’s European allies in NATO over their defense spending.
The other main takeaway from Trump’s trip was a PR blunder when the White House canceled his plan to visit an American military cemetery due to rain grounding the presidential helicopter.
AFP
15/11/2015
Categories: World News