Trump hires 'street fighter' in new
shakeup of White House campaign
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[August 18, 2016]
By Steve Holland and Emily Flitter
(Reuters) - U.S. Republican Donald Trump
overhauled his presidential campaign team on Wednesday for the second
time in less than two months, hiring the head of a conservative news
website to bolster his combative image and try to reverse poor opinion
poll numbers.
Trump named Steve Bannon, head of the Breitbart News website, as
campaign chief executive officer, a new position. He also promoted
senior adviser Kellyanne Conway to the post of campaign manager.
The latest shake-up combines Bannon, a conservative flamethrower, with
Conway, a measured, data-driven analyst who might be able to broaden
Trump's appeal to women and independent voters.
It offers Trump's team a chance to return to the "let Trump be Trump"
style practiced by former campaign manager Corey Lewandowski that helped
Trump, who has never held elective office, win the Republican
presidential nomination for the Nov. 8 election.
Lewandowski, ousted in the last campaign reorganization in June, said on
CNN that Bannon was "a street fighter" like himself. A Trump campaign
statement announcing the changes touted a Bloomberg Politics article
that branded Bannon "the most dangerous political operative in America."
Whether that style will work in the fight against Democratic nominee
Hillary Clinton is unclear. Trump, a New York real estate developer and
former reality TV host, has largely been unable to extend his reach
beyond white middle-class voters who pack his rallies.
Trump trails Clinton in national opinion polls and in many battleground
states, potentially facing a big defeat that could also cost Republicans
congressional races.
Trump, who relishes revving up crowds with off-the-cuff remarks, drew
criticism for comments insulting women, Muslims and Mexican immigrants
during the primary campaign for the Republican nomination.
He has since faced a barrage of criticism from Republicans over his
campaign style and his refusal to stick to a policy message. In
particular, he has been rebuked for his prolonged feud with the family
of a Muslim U.S. Army captain who was killed in the Iraq war.
On Wednesday afternoon, Trump received his first intelligence briefing
from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
Retired U.S. Lieutenant General Michael Flynn, a Trump adviser who
attended the briefing at the New York field office of the Federal Bureau
of Investigation, said the officials who conducted the two-hour session
were "absolutely professional" and that it was "a great conversation."
Intelligence officials brief the major-party U.S. presidential
candidates on foreign policy and national security issues but do not
disclose ultra-sensitive information about ongoing U.S. undercover
operations, methods or the identities of intelligence sources.
DIFFERENT STYLES
Wednesday's campaign appointments amounted to a demotion for Paul
Manafort, who was brought on as campaign manager in June to bring a more
professional touch to Trump's campaign but has struggled to get the
businessman to rein in his freewheeling ways.
Clinton, a former secretary of state who has called Trump
temperamentally unsuited for the White House, said staff shake-ups did
nothing to change the candidate and his rhetoric.
"Donald Trump has shown us who he is, he can hire and fire anybody he
wants from his campaign, they can make him read new words from a
teleprompter, but he is still the same man who insults Gold Star
families, demeans women, mocks people with disabilities and thinks he
knows more about ISIS than our generals," she told a rally in Ohio.
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Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump arrives in the parking
garage of a federal building in New York, U.S., August 17, 2016.
REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
Conway and Bannon may prove to be opposing forces in Trump’s
campaign. Conway is analytical and numbers-driven and often offers a
more pragmatic approach to winning campaigns. She is expected to
travel with Trump. Bannon likes to push the limits of polite
conversation and revels in taking the fight up a notch, strategists
say.
"For Steve and I, we also recognize that we are different when we
say we have different styles, but we have one vision," Conway told
reporters.
Bannon was a key figure in producing and promoting a movie called
"Clinton Cash" that accused Bill and Hillary Clinton of doing favors
for high-dollar donors to the Clinton Foundation charity, a theme
that Trump has been touching on in his campaign speeches.
"My guess is Bannon will be a bull in a china shop and Conway will
be focused on messaging and paid media," said Republican strategist
Matt Mackowiak.
The appointment of Bannon suggested Trump was aiming not to tone
down his aggressive style but to be more disciplined in emphasizing
themes that resonate strongly with the voters he is trying to court,
such as his tough stance against illegal immigration and withering
personal criticism of Clinton.
"I am who I am, I don’t want to change," Trump told Wisconsin
television station WKTB on Tuesday. "If you start pivoting, you’re
not being honest with people.”
The shift to new leadership may not be a good sign at this stage of
a campaign, but some Republican strategists said it was not too late
for Trump.
"I've thought for a while that they've needed more smart, senior
people and it looks like they just got them," said Republican
strategist Charlie Black. "It's only the middle of August. This race
is going to be close in the end, but he does need to tighten up his
performance."
Conway told Fox News she was advising Trump to take “his case
directly to the people.” “With Donald Trump, he is still his own
best messenger because people see him as very authentic.".
She has worked to improve the Republican Party's standing with women
voters and to push back on Democratic accusations that Republicans
are waging a "war on women."
Manafort drew unwelcome attention this week when The New York Times
reported his name was on secret ledgers showing cash payments
designated to him of more than $12 million from a Ukrainian
political party with close ties to Russia. Manafort denied any
impropriety on Monday.
The current RealClearPolitics average of national opinion polls puts
Clinton six percentage points ahead of Trump, at 47.2 percent to his
41.2 percent.
(Additional reporting by Alana Wise, Amanda Becker, Ginger Gibson,
Luciana Lopez, Mark Hosenball and Eric Beech; Writing by Alistair
Bell and Peter Cooney; Editing by Frances Kerry and Jonathan Oatis)
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