A source familiar with the president’s health tells the White House pool: “The president’s vitals over the last 24 hours were very concerning and the next 48 hours will be critical in terms of his care. We’re still not on a clear path to a full recovery.”
This anonymous quote was sent to the White House pool reporters. It arrived in my inbox and the inboxes of other reporters who cover this White House. I do not know where this quote came from, and why this anonymous person has the authority to contradict the president’s doctors.
CONTEXT: Behind the scenes, the White House has been fighting with reporters who have shared information from anonymous sources since we learned about Trump’s illness. But as you can see, the White House is sharing information from anonymous sources with us, too.
The press and the public are struggling with this fundamental problem: we do not know who we can trust to receive reliable information about the health of the President of the United States.
UPDATE: Immediately after the press conference ended and before the anonymous statement was sent out, Mark Meadows briefed reporters without cameras—but he was caught on a feed asking to be off the record.
So we have the White House chief of staff on camera, anonymously providing contradictory information to reporters right after the president’s doctors briefed the public.
This clip starts at 1:41:10
The press and the public are not the only people struggling to make sense of conflicting reports about the president’s condition. Asked what it’s like to try to get information about what’s happening, a senior White House official tells @NYMag: “That’s easy. We don’t get any.”
I‘ve said this to several White House officials today privately, and I want to say it here for everyone who works in this government to see: when you spread false information or help keep the truth from being reported, you hurt your own credibility, not just the president’s.
There will be life after Trump (probably). If nothing else, you should cynically consider what you’re doing to your own reputation when you stand in the way of transparency.
Anyway my point is, please continue to leak. Thanks! Xoxoxo
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The story Daniels has told about this encounter has evolved since 2018, insofar as her interpretation of the events and her own agency at the time of the encounter has evolved. But it did not suddenly change today in the courtroom, contrary to what the defense seems to think.
Some things to know about the prosecution’s next witness, Hope Hicks: her relationship with the Trump family began in 2012 when she began doing PR for Ivanka from an outside firm. She joined the Trump Org. By the winter of 2014, when Donald Trump was preparing to run for the GOP nom, she was part of a tiny circle of his trusted advisers.
For most of the 2016 campaign, the staff was the Island of Misfit Toys. Hardly anyone had traditional political experience. At least half the staffers were possibly literally, clinically insane. Her general competence and normal-ness and likability made her an outlier.
She was good at managing the principal. She was good under pressure. And she maintained good relationships with the mainstream press. She entered the WH as a senior adviser and kept a small office within earshot of the Oval. Close enough that Trump would just yell out for her.
Sarah Huckabee Sanders has not yet responded to a request for comment about David Pecker’s testimony that she was involved, in her capacity as a White House official, in the hush money cover up, but Stephanie Grisham confirms that Sanders initiated discussions about the story “all the time.”
Grisham was working for the First Lady. According to Grisham, Sarah Huckabee Sanders (now the governor of Arkansas) and Hope Hicks (an expected witness for the prosecution) contacted her to ask, “What did I know, what did Melania know, what were we going to do.”
Grisham adds, “I would ask them what they knew and they would always tell me they knew absolutely nothing.”
Hello from Manhattan criminal court where Donald Trump’s hush money trial officially starts this morning
It is another freezing day inside this courthouse
Donald Trump just arrived, railed against Letitia James, and then walked into the courtroom. He’s now hunched over in his seat whispering to his attorneys.
As Trump looks on in the courtroom, his lawyer is reading tweets from a prospective juror in which she called him “a racist, sexist narcissist” and “anathema to everything” she had been taught by her faith and that, among other things, he has no sense of right and wrong.
The prospective juror is now reading her own tweet aloud and she remarks, “Oof, that sounds bad!” lol
The prospective juror is asked to turn to the second page of her social media posts. She sighs dramatically and says, “Aghh, gosh.”