'He always doubles down': Inside the political crisis caused by Trump's racist tweets [View all]
President Trumps own top aides didnt think he fully understood what he had done last Sunday, when he fired off a trio of racist tweets before a trip to his golf course.
After he returned to the White House, senior adviser Kellyanne Conway felt compelled to tell him why the missives were leading newscasts around the country, upsetting allies and enraging opponents. Calling on four minority congresswomen all citizens, three born in the United States to go back to the totally broken and crime infested places from which they came had hit a painful historical nerve.
Trump defended himself. He had been watching Dumb Fux & Friends after waking up. He wanted to elevate the congresswomen, as he had previously discussed with aides. The Democratic lawmakers Reps. Ayanna Pressley (Mass.), Ilhan Omar (Minn.), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (N.Y.) and Rashida Tlaib (Mich.) were good foils, he had told his advisers, including campaign manager Brad Parscale. The president said he thought he was interjecting himself into Democratic Party politics in a good way.
As is often the case, Trump acted alone impulsively following his gut to the dark side of American politics, and now the country would have to pick up the pieces. The day before, on the golf course, he hadnt brought it up. Over the coming days, dozens of friends, advisers and political allies would work behind the scenes to try to fix the mess without any public admission of error, because that was not the Trump way.
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