Priebus had tried to navigate the campaign from the beginning. When Trump called Mexicans “rapists” in the speech announcing his candidacy on June 16, 2015, Priebus called him and said, “You can’t talk like that. We’ve been working really hard to win over Hispanics.”
Trump would not tone it down, and he attacked anyone who attacked him. No national party chairman had ever dealt with a headache quite like Trump.
Senator Mitch McConnell, the wily Republican majority leader, had called Priebus confidentially. His message: Forget Trump, divert Republican money to us, the Senate candidates, and shut off the money faucet to Donald Trump.
But Priebus wanted to preserve a relationship with Trump, and he decided to plant himself firmly in the middle between Trump and McConnell. It was tactically sound, he thought. Survival for the party and him. He had told Trump, “I’m with you 100 percent. I love you. I’m going to keep working for you. But I have to protect the party. I have a responsibility that’s different than just you.”
Priebus had agreed to come out and campaign with Trump and introduce him at rallies. He saw it as extending a hand to a drowning man.
The
There was so much talking in the
Perilous times, maybe the worst, for Trump and the party, Priebus thought. There was only one path forward: escalation on all fronts. Maximize aggression to conceal vital weakness.
That Sunday morning, Steve Bannon arrived at Trump Tower in Manhattan and told security he had a meeting with Mr. Trump.
“That’s terrific,” the security guard said. “He’s never here on weekends.”
Bannon phoned Trump.
“Hey,” the candidate explained, “I’m in Bedminster”—where Trump National Golf Club was located. “Since you’re not here, I’ll go play golf. Come out here, we’re having lunch. Be here, like, one o’clock.”
He proceeded to give detailed instructions for the drive 40 miles west of New York City.
“I’ll find it,” Bannon said.
No, turn right on Rattlesnake Bridge Road, then take a right for about a mile.
“I’ll find it. It’s your Trump National.”
No, Trump persisted, you’ve got to understand. Trump provided full driving instructions with more detail than Bannon had ever heard him give on anything.
Bannon had a driver take him to Bedminster to arrive at noon to make sure he was on time. Inside the clubhouse, he was shown to a table set for five.
You’re early, said someone from the staff. The others won’t be here until 1 p.m.
The others? Bannon asked.
Roger Ailes, Governor Chris Christie and “the Mayor”—Rudy Giuliani—also were attending.
Bannon was pissed. He was not there to audition in front of anyone. He and Trump had agreed, made a deal which should not be reviewable.
Ailes, the founder and head of Fox News and longtime Republican political operative, going back to Richard Nixon, came in first. He had been a mentor to Bannon.
“What the fuck?” Ailes said, and launched into a criticism of the campaign.
“How bad are the numbers?” Bannon asked.
“This is going to be a blowout.”
“I talked to Trump last night,” Bannon said. “The Mercers talked to him. I’m supposed to be coming in and taking over the campaign, but don’t tell the other two guys that.”
“What the fuck?” Ailes said again. “You don’t know anything about campaigns.” It was out of the question.
“I know, but anybody could get more organized than this thing is.”
Though Bannon had known Ailes for years, he would not appear on Ailes’s Fox News network.
Bannon once said, “I’ve never been on Fox because I didn’t want to be beholden to him. . . . Never be beholden to Roger or he fucking owns you.”
This contrasted sharply with his relationship to Trump, who, in his view, was a supplicant. Trump had appeared on a series of
Ailes said they were there for their weekly debate prep. The first presidential debate against Hillary Clinton was a month and a half away, on September 26.
“Debate prep?” Bannon said. “You, Christie and Rudy?”
“This is the second one.”
“He’s actually prepping for the debates?” Bannon said, suddenly impressed.
“No, he comes and plays golf and we just talk about the campaign and stuff like that. But we’re trying to get him in the habit.”
Campaign manager Paul Manafort walked in.
Bannon, who regularly called himself “a fire-breathing populist,” was disgusted. Manafort was dressed in what could pass for yachting attire, with a kerchief. Live from Southampton!
Trump arrived and sat down. Hot dogs and hamburgers were laid out. The fantasy diet of an 11-year-old kid, Bannon thought, as Trump wolfed down two hot dogs.