Trump and Obama set campaign rancor aside
with White House meeting
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[November 11, 2016]
By Steve Holland and Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President
Barack Obama and President-elect Donald Trump met on Thursday for the
first time, setting aside the deep rancor that dominated the long
campaign season to discuss the transition to the Republican's
inauguration on Jan. 20.
Their 90-minute meeting in the White House Oval Office, with no aides
present, took place just two days after Trump's stunning election
victory over Hillary Clinton, Obama's former secretary of state.
Obama, who vigorously campaigned for his fellow Democrat to succeed him,
had repeatedly called Trump unfit for the president's office, while the
businessman had often dubbed Obama's eight-year tenure a "disaster."
But in separate post-election remarks on Wednesday, both men appeared to
seek to help the country heal from a bitterly divisive campaign, and
that tone continued into the White House meeting.
Seated next to Obama after their talks, Trump told reporters: "We really
discussed a lot of situations, some wonderful, some difficulties." He
said Obama explained "some of the really great things that have been
achieved," but did not elaborate.
"It was a great honor being with you and I look forward to being with
you many, many more times in the future," Trump said, with a tone of
deference.
Trump, a real estate magnate who has never held political office, later
met congressional leaders, including U.S. House of Representatives
Speaker Paul Ryan, a Republican who has had a strained relationship with
Trump.
"A fantastic day in D.C. Met with President Obama for first time. Really
good meeting, great chemistry," Trump said on Twitter late on Thursday.
Amid the efforts to bury hatchets, there were protests in a string of
U.S. cities against Trump for a second day on Thursday as demonstrators
expressed concern that Trump's election would be a blow to civil rights.
"Just had a very open and successful presidential election. Now
professional protesters, incited by the media, are protesting. Very
unfair!" Trump tweeted.
Obama said he had offered assistance to Trump over the next couple of
months, and urged the country to unite to face its challenges.
"We now are going to want to do everything we can to help you succeed
because if you succeed, then the country succeeds," Obama said, adding
he and Trump discussed a range of domestic and foreign policy issues and
details related to the transition period.
"The meeting might have been at least a little less awkward than some
might have expected," White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters.
The two men's relaxed, cordial demeanor in front of the cameras was in
stark contrast to the months of harsh rhetoric during the campaign.
Trump used Obama as a punching bag during his campaign speeches,
repeatedly attacking the president's policies from healthcare to an Iran
nuclear deal. Both Obama and first lady Michelle Obama attacked Trump as
temperamentally unfit for the White House and dangerously unprepared to
have access to U.S. nuclear codes.
Asked at a White House briefing on Thursday whether the meeting had
eased any of the concerns about Trump that Obama expressed during the
campaign, Earnest said: "The president was never in a position to choose
a successor. The American people chose his successor."
ON THE HILL
Trump went from the White House to Capitol Hill for meetings with
Republican congressional leaders, most of whom had a frosty relationship
with Trump during a campaign where he tore into the Washington
establishment.
Republicans retained control of the Senate and House in Tuesday's
election, meaning at least some of Trump's agenda may find friendly
terrain in Congress.
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Barack Obama meets with Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White
House. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Trump emerged from meeting Ryan, along with Vice President-elect
Mike Pence, to tell reporters: "We’re going to lower taxes as you
know.” He added, in reference to Obama's signature healthcare reform
of 2010 that is a common target of Trump and congressional
Republicans: “We’re going to fix healthcare and make it more
affordable and better."
Ryan has sought to smooth over his relationship with Trump and his
spokeswoman, AshLee Strong, said he was "excited for the potential
for unified Republican government and eager to get to work with Mr.
Trump."
Trump also met for an hour with Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell, saying afterward that he had told the senator his top
three priorities were better control of immigration and the borders,
healthcare and jobs.
In what seemed like a possible early pivot by Trump, controversial
campaign proposals, including his call to ban Muslims from entering
the United States, disappeared for a while on Thursday from the
president-elect's campaign website. His campaign later blamed a
technical problem and the statements were returned to the website.
Trump declined to respond when asked by reporters after meeting with
McConnell if he would ask Congress to ban Muslims from entering the
country.
On another Trump campaign pledge, a top Trump aide, former House
Speaker Newt Gingrich told NPR he did not expect him to spend much
time trying to make Mexico pay for a proposed wall along the U.S.
southern border, but "it was a great campaign device."
Such proposals, along with his free-wheeling tone and frequent
insults of critics and rivals, earned Trump the disapproval of not
just Democrats but many in the Republican establishment during the
election campaign.
Trump's camp also showed signs it was beginning building a
government, with names for top Cabinet positions being leaked. Steve
Bannon, Trump's campaign chief, and Republican National Committee
Chairman Reince Priebus could be named chief of staff. Trump has
long hinted that his Treasury secretary could be campaign finance
chair Steven Mnuchin, formerly of Goldman Sachs, but there were
reports U.S. Representative Jeb Hensarling and J.P. Morgan's Jamie
Dimon were also being considered.
Thursday's start at fence-mending also included meetings between
Vice President Joe Biden and his future successor, Pence, and
between the current and future first ladies.
Michelle Obama met privately with Trump's wife, Melania, in the
White House residence. Michelle Obama has raised two daughters in
the White House and the Trumps have a son, 10 year-old Barron. The
two women discussed raising children at the White House, Earnest
said.
"Melania liked Mrs. O a lot!," Donald Trump said on Twitter.
(Reporting by Steve Holland, Jeff Mason, Roberta Rampton, Susan
Cornwell and David Morgan; Writing by Richard Cowan and Ginger
Gibson; Editing by Frances Kerry and Peter Cooney)
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