Previous books about the Trump administration have been dealt with by Trump and his Republican cohorts as just being false. Bob Woodward's new book is different. That's because he has an impeccable reputation for honesty, and he has interview tapes to back up everything he said in the book. In short, the book already has Trump, his cabinet and aides, and his congressional defenders running scared.
Here is much of an excellent op-ed by Brent Budowsky for The Hill on the subject:
As the details from the new Bob Woodward book, "Fear: Trump in the White House," begin to emerge, there is trembling throughout the Republican cloakrooms in the Senate and House, throughout the White House staff and throughout the community of those who have been Trump’s most visible shills and apologists in the media.
Woodward’s book is a tale of contempt toward the president from a long list of his closest advisors in the White House and contempt from the president toward many of his closest past and current advisors. . . .
It is not surprising to learn that former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and current White House chief of staff John Kelly are quoted as referring to Trump with words such as “idiot” and “moron” (often attached to profanity).
It is not surprising to learn that Secretary of Defense James Mattis is quoted as saying that Trump has the understanding of a fifth- or sixth-grader, and that senior White House aides literally stole and hid papers from the president’s desk to prevent him from taking actions they believed could threaten American and world security.
It is not surprising to learn that most of the upper echelon of the White House staff was at internal war with the president to protect him from his lesser instincts and to protect the nation and the world from the extreme dangers he could cause to the nation and world by his reckless and intemperate behavior.
It is not surprising that Trump’s legal team does not want him to testify under oath before special counsel Robert Mueller because they fear that he would lie so much that he would, as his former lawyer John Dowd was quoted as saying, end up "wearing an orange jumpsuit."
It is not surprising that Trump has such extreme contempt for Attorney General Jeff Sessions that he called him mentally retarded and mocked his Southern accent, which will not help Republicans or Trump in Southern states.
It is only slightly surprising to read that Trump has such stinging contempt for his lawyer Rudy Giuliani that he is quoted comparing him to a baby who needs a change of diapers.
The day Woodward's book is released will be a day of reckoning. It will be a reckoning for White House staff and cabinet members who will now be in meetings with the president in which Trump knows what they said about him, and they know what Trump has said about them.
It will be a reckoning for Republicans in the House and Senate who act like automatons marching in lockstep to defend Trump. . . .
It will put intense pressure on those who can fairly be called Trump shills, defending him on various media outlets, whose own credibility has already been damaged by their defenses of Trump, often with dubious arguments.
Will they continue to put their names in writing or their faces on television defending Trump and discussing, point by point, the revelations in the Woodward book?
History will show that the Manafort convictions were a defining moment in the midterm elections and the Russia investigations.
It will also show the Woodward book will be a defining moment as the American people render judgment on the Trump presidency, his defenders, apologists, enablers and shills.
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