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2024-10-26 02:05:01 UTC
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Permalinkpresidential adviser portrays John F. Kelly as having a bullying,
"Jekyll-and-Hyde" demeanor. Kelly denies the allegations.
In a forthcoming memoir, Jared Kushner alleges that former president Donald
Trump's second chief of staff, John F. Kelly, was viewed within the White
House as a bully with a "Jekyll-and-Hyde" demeanor who once shoved his wife,
Ivanka Trump, out of his way after a volatile Oval Office meeting. Kelly
denies the allegation.
Kushner, who served as senior presidential adviser, writes in "Breaking
History: A White House Memoir" that he and his wife viewed Kelly as
"consistently duplicitous" but "only once did Kelly let his mask fully slip."
"One day he had just marched out of a contentious meeting in the Oval
Office," Kushner writes. "Ivanka was walking down the main hallway in the
West Wing when she passed him. Unaware of his heated state of mind, she said,
'Hello, chief.' Kelly shoved her out of the way and stormed by. She wasn't
hurt, and didn't make a big deal about the altercation, but in his rage Kelly
had shown his true character."
In his recounting, Kushner writes that, about an hour later, Kelly visited
Ivanka's second-floor West Wing office to offer what he describes as "a meek
apology, which she accepted."
In an email responding to Kushner's depiction of the incident, Kelly wrote,
"I don't recall anything like you describe."
"It is inconceivable that I would EVER shove a woman. Inconceivable. Never
happen," Kelly wrote. "Would never intentionally do something like that.
Also, don't remember ever apologizing to her for something I didn't do. I'd
remember that."
Kushner, however, writes that Julie Radford, Ivanka Trump's chief of staff,
had been meeting with Trump and heard Kelly deliver an apology. "It was the
first and only time that Ivanka's staff saw Kelly visit their second-floor
corner of the West Wing," he writes.
Through a spokesperson, Trump said that her husband's description of the
incident is accurate. Radford also said she witnessed Kelly come to Ivanka's
office, and that she heard him offer her an apology.
Donald Trump himself has a well-earned reputation for bullying and
dishonesty, and The Washington Post's Fact Checker chronicled more than
30,000 false or misleading statements from him during his four years in
office. Many of Trump's staffers also were known for offering competing
versions of the same event, often making it difficult to determine the truth
of what happened.
Four years of Trump falsehoods Fact Checker 5:04
The Fact Checker counted a total of 30,573 false or misleading claims made by
President Trump during his White House tenure. Here's what we learned.
(Video: Adriana Usero/The Washington Post)
The Washington Post obtained excerpts of Kushner's memoir, which is set to be
published on Aug. 23.
Kelly initially joined Trump's administration as homeland security secretary,
but became Trump's chief of staff midway through his first year in office
after Trump replaced Reince Priebus, his first chief of staff.
Kelly, a retired four-star Marine general, viewed his mandate as bringing
order and military-style discipline to Trump's freewheeling and chaotic West
Wing. But some in Trump's orbit -- including Kushner and Ivanka Trump -- soon
chafed under Kelly's strict procedures, which included requiring the
president's family to alert Kelly of their work-related interactions with
Trump.
Kelly also grew frustrated with the couple who, in his view, seemed
determined to circumvent his authority and backchannel to the president.
In his memoir, Kushner depicts Kelly as privately dismissive of Ivanka while
publicly showering her "with compliments to her face that she knew were
insincere."
"Then the four-star general would call her staff to his office and berate and
intimidate them over trivial procedural issues that his rigid system often
created," Kushner writes. "He would frequently refer to her initiatives like
paid family leave and the child tax credit as 'Ivanka's pet projects.' "
Kushner recounts another incident in Beijing in 2017 -- a version of which
was initially reported by Axios -- in which Kelly got into a fight with
Chinese officials after a Chinese security official tried to prevent Trump's
military aide from joining the president in a meeting with the "nuclear
football," the leather briefcase that contains the nuclear codes and
accompanies the president everywhere.
The attempt by the Chinese to meddle with the nuclear football, Kushner
writes, "was an alarming diplomatic breach."
But he also describes Kelly as being overly aggressive, and using the moment
to assert his authority over the Chinese.
"Kelly caught a glimpse of the scuffle and rushed toward the doorway,
grabbing the Chinese officer by the neck and pinning him against the wall,"
Kushner writes. "'You people are rude,' he screamed. 'The Chinese people are
rude! This is terrible! This is not how you treat your guests!' A protocol
official rushed in, realizing the security officer's mistake, and apologized
profusely. But Kelly stormed away, boycotting the meeting and leaving a chair
next to the president conspicuously empty."
Kushner said Kelly then joined the rest of the White House staff and "regaled
us with the story of what had just unfolded," before refusing an attempt by
the head of Chinese protocol to personally apologize for the mistake.
In an email, Kelly, like Kushner, said the incident occurred when Chinese
officials attempted to interfere with the diplomatic pouch, when they "know
that they have no right to inspect it or send it through a magnetometer."
"The situation was already confrontational when I heard the commotion a
distance away, moved to the location, and in no uncertain terms reminded them
that they would not have access," Kelly wrote. "The Chinese officials on site
elected to continue the confrontational approach until they were 'convinced'
that we were correct. At that point the confrontation ended."
Kelly added: "A few minutes later a Chinese (protocol I think) official came
to our hold room and apologized to me. Issue over. Nothing after that."
But in Kushner's telling, when he saw Kelly and the head of Chinese protocol
walking together after the incident, "chummy as could be," he finally had a
window into understanding Trump's chief of staff.
"In that moment, I finally understood John Kelly," Kushner writes. "To him,
everything was a game of establishing dominance and control. He made people
feel small and unimportant to establish the relationship from a place of
power. Then, with his position firmly established, he would charm and disarm,
leaving people relieved that they were on his good side, but fearful of what
would happen if they crossed him."
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Let's go Brandon!