Los Angeles Times

Harsh spotlight on John Kelly

Facing outcry over his support for an accused abuser, he sheds his image as calming force in the White House.

- By Noah Bierman and Brian Bennett noah.bierman @latimes.com brian.bennett@latimes.com Times staff writer Lisa Mascaro in Washington contribute­d to this report.

President Trump’s chief of staff is shedding his image as a calming force after he labeled some immigrants lazy and defended an alleged domestic abuser.

WASHINGTON — When John F. Kelly oversaw the military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, dozens of detainees refused to eat as a form of protest. Kelly, furious at the potential propaganda implicatio­ns, instructed his charges to avoid the term “hunger strike,” insisting it be called a “longterm nonreligio­us fast.”

That moment in 2013 showed that Kelly can be “spectacula­rly tone-deaf,” said a senior military officer who served at U.S. Southern Command when Kelly was the commander. It highlighte­d “a kind of paternalis­tic, the-adults-are-incharge, we-know-better, cavalier approach to bending and attempting to control facts.”

“If you think you can control language, then you have a lot of other problems in determinin­g how the world sees things,” said the officer, requesting anonymity to avoid upsetting his current employer.

This week, in two highly visible incidents, that same weakness flared for Kelly, now chief of staff for a president who has long insisted he will never be “politicall­y correct.” The result has damaged his reputation as a calming force for an oftenchaot­ic White House.

The most recent case engulfed the White House as officials struggled with Kelly’s defense of a top aide, Rob Porter, who resigned Wednesday and left the White House on Thursday after allegation­s became public that he had physically abused two ex-wives.

Only after a grim photo of one of the women’s blackened eye was published did Kelly offer a measure of condemnati­on. Until the images surfaced, officials had said Porter would stay in his post for an extended period before leaving.

“I was shocked by the new allegation­s released today against Rob Porter,” Kelly said in a statement late Wednesday. “There is no place for domestic violence in our society.”

That came hours after Kelly had given Porter strong backing, praising his “integrity and honor.” Even in the latter statement, in which he accepted Porter’s resignatio­n, Kelly added that he stood by “my previous comments of the Rob Porter that I have come to know since becoming chief of staff, and believe every individual deserves the right to defend their reputation.”

Inevitably, the efforts to defend Porter generated questions about what Kelly knew and when.

White House spokesman Raj Shah conceded Thursday that the photo played a key role in changing the position of Kelly and other officials who had tried to persuade Porter to stay at his job and fight the allegation­s.

Shah also acknowledg­ed that Porter had been operating on an “interim” security clearance after the allegation­s of spousal abuse had come up during his FBI background check. That clearance allowed him to review classified documents.

Shah would not say how much of the allegation­s Kelly had been told about. But instead of suspending Porter from his duties while the allegation­s were investigat­ed, Kelly allowed him to stay on the job.

“We all could have done better,” Shah said in a rare concession of error in Trump’s White House.

Kelly’s initial praise of Porter came Tuesday as the Daily Mail of London, which first published the abuse allegation­s, confronted the White House with the details.

Trump, who was not aware of the specific problems with Porter’s security clearance, was “surprised” by the allegation­s when he heard the news reports Tuesday night, Shah said.

The questions about Porter came on top of an incident in which Kelly told reporters Tuesday that some of the young immigrants known as “Dreamers” who failed to seek legal protection­s under an Obama-era program were “too lazy to get off their asses,” eliciting accusation­s that he was engaging in ugly stereotype­s.

Kelly was brought into the White House in July after serving as secretary of Homeland Security. His predecesso­r, Reince Priebus, was seen as too weak to tame the White House’s competing factions and gain the respect and confidence of Trump.

Those who know Trump well say he has valued Kelly’s attempts to instill order, even though Trump has bristled at times over Kelly’s desire to exert so much control over who sees and speaks with the president.

Last month, Kelly pushed Trump’s limits when he told members of the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus that the president’s initial campaign promise of a solid continuous border wall was “uninformed” and that Mexico would not pay for it.

That, and similar comments to Fox News, prompted Trump to tweet defensivel­y, “The Wall is the Wall, it has never changed or evolved from the first day I conceived of it,” while conceding that “parts of it” would be transparen­t and other areas of the border with natural protection­s would not have any structure at all.

“Kelly, of course, has brought down an iron curtain, and I think the president likes the fact that it’s more orderly,” said Roger Stone, a longtime political advisor to Trump. But, Stone added that “having worked for Donald Trump for 40 years, at a certain point, he hates being left in the dark.”

Stone called the Porter incident a “self-inflicted wound,” though some of that criticism arises from Stone’s view that Porter, a Harvard-educated former top Senate aide, is too closely tied to the Republican establishm­ent.

Porter’s resignatio­n, and the fumbling response to it, also renewed attention to the White House’s struggles to vet top employees — one of the problems that Kelly’s supporters had suggested he could fix.

The earliest example of the vetting problem came with the naming of Michael Flynn as Trump’s first national security advisor, despite known red flags that led to his guilty plea on charges of lying to the FBI.

Just last week, Trump’s appointee as head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr. Brenda Fitzgerald, resigned after Politico reported that she traded in tobacco stocks after taking the position. Tom Price, Trump’s first secretary of Health and Human Services, also was accused of financial conflicts of interest. Anthony Scaramucci lasted just 10 days as Trump’s communicat­ions director.

Omarosa Manigault, a former contestant on “The Apprentice” who left her White House position in December, was casually dismissed by Shah on Thursday as someone who should be taken “not very seriously,” when he was asked about new criticisms she levied this week against the White House.

At the same time, Kelly’s comments about immigrants brought to the U.S. illegally when they were children were another reminder that the chief of staff shares some of Trump’s instincts to insert tough language into polarizing issues.

The comment about Dreamers, uttered in the midst of difficult negotiatio­ns over how to prevent hundreds of thousands of new deportatio­ns, generated anger among Latinos and immigrant advocates.

Sen. Kamala Harris (DCalif.) said Kelly’s “insults of Dreamers are both factually and morally wrong and do not speak to the best of who we are as a nation.”

Rep. Luis Gutierrez (DIll.) said on the House floor Thursday, “I say to the chief of staff of the president of the United States, the Dreamers are not lazy.”

Kelly’s taste for confrontat­ion emerged in October as well, when he falsely accused a Democratic congresswo­man, Florida Rep. Frederica Wilson, of grandstand­ing during the dedication of an FBI facility in Miami named for fallen agents.

Even when confronted with video evidence that his accusation wasn’t true, Kelly refused to back down, displaying another Trumpian quality.

The conflict with Wilson arose out of a dispute involving Trump’s condolence call to the family of a fallen soldier.

During his time as a general, Kelly had a reputation as a forceful but pragmatic decision-maker, said a former national security official who has worked closely with Kelly and now worries that his current post has clouded his judgment.

The attention to Kelly’s actions has put him in an uncomforta­ble spot. In November, he explained part of his philosophy to reporters traveling with Trump to Asia. He insisted he was trying to push his staff away from the reactive mode that preceded his arrival.

Last month, he brought reporters into his office to brief them about Trump’s plans to address Dreamers as part of a broader immigratio­n proposal.

Trump burst in and unexpected­ly told reporters he would support a path to citizenshi­p.

Kelly folded his hands and leaned against a windowsill, appearing to avoid revealing any emotion with his facial expression.

As the encounter wore on, Trump began veering into other topics, eventually offering that he would “love” to speak with Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel investigat­ing Russian meddling in the presidenti­al election.

Kelly audibly sighed.

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? WHITE HOUSE Chief of Staff John F. Kelly, left, initially praised the “integrity and honor” of a top aide, Rob Porter, in response to allegation­s that he had physically abused his two ex-wives. Porter resigned Wednesday.
Evan Vucci Associated Press WHITE HOUSE Chief of Staff John F. Kelly, left, initially praised the “integrity and honor” of a top aide, Rob Porter, in response to allegation­s that he had physically abused his two ex-wives. Porter resigned Wednesday.

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