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The Note: When Trump lets Trump be Trump

What happens when Trump really lets Trump be Trump?

April 6, 2018, 5:48 AM

The TAKE with Rick Klein

Staff letting Trump be Trump is one thing. But what happens when Trump really lets Trump be Trump?

That’s the stuff of tirades about rapes of migrant women and asylum-seeker caravans, of military deployments to the border and out of Syria, of voter fraud, dead DACA deals, veto threats, and trade wars that are easy to win, even if nothing has really happened at all.

President Donald Trump has returned to his political and business roots in recent days. He’s let fly a torrent of head-spinning and mind-bending ideas that his own White House can barely keep up with, much less explain or enforce.

The Trump who literally rips up scripts is the man who got elected. But it’s this side of Trump – improvising the most powerful job in the world, and not talking about the tax cuts or the economy or a Republican vision – that drives his allies crazy when it reveals itself.

“Trump unbound” is already trite, even a cliché. But it all leaves the president testing limits of both propriety and patience.

PHOTO: President Donald Trump leads a prison reform roundtable in the Roosevelt Room at the White House, Jan. 11, 2018, in Washington.
President Donald Trump leads a prison reform roundtable in the Roosevelt Room at the White House, Jan. 11, 2018, in Washington.

The RUNDOWN with MaryAlice Parks

Capping his week in West Virginia, President Trump may have talked to voters who like him, but did he talk about issues they care about?

"Our economy's strong. Our jobs are great," President Trump said in a state where almost no one would agree.

Many voters we talked to this week in West Virginia said they like the president, but they are still worried.

Not about MS-13, a border wall, caravans, Syria, or taxes.

They are worried, they said, about bread and butter issues like health care, debt, opioids, wages, and jobs, jobs, jobs.

That central question about how to bring opportunity to the state, voters told us, will drive their decisions in the primary elections in the state in just a few weeks.

Like elsewhere in the country, a lot of voters in West Virginia feel good and hopeful that the administration's moves to cut regulations and green-light energy projects could, perhaps, lead to some more blue collar hires and a brighter economic future.

But for now, again this week, the president's mind seemed elsewhere.

PHOTO: President Donald Trump smiles during a roundtable discussion on tax policy, April 5, 2018, in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va.
President Donald Trump smiles during a roundtable discussion on tax policy, April 5, 2018, in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va., with from left, Service Pump and Supply principal engineer Sean Farrell, Rep. Evan Jenkins, R-W.Va., and West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey.

The TIP with John Verhovek

A familiar face in GOP politics is resurfacing in Minnesota.

Former GOP presidential candidate Tim Pawlenty, who served as the state's governor from 2003 to 2011, has announced another bid for the office, giving the party a recognizable name atop the ticket in a state that could be key to the 2018 midterm landscape.

Both of the state's U.S. Senate seats are up this year, and a number of U.S. House races in the state are expected to be very competitive. Republicans are likely to argue Pawlenty's presence on the ballot increases their chances to hold and pick up seats crucial to maintaining their majority.

The GOP is eyeing two open seat races in the state, Minnesota's 1st and 8th Congressional Districts, as prime opportunities to flip blue seats red. At the same time Republicans need to hold the 2nd and 3rd Congressional Districts in suburban Minneapolis.

Democratic Rep. Tim Walz, State Auditor Rebecca Otto and State Representative Erin Murphy are all vying for the Democratic nomination for governor in a state Hillary Clinton won by less than two points in the 2016 presidential election.

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY

  • President Trump has no public events on his schedule. Press Secretary Sarah Sanders briefs at 2 p.m.
  • The Senate and House of Representatives will return from recess on Monday, April 9.
  • Defense Secretary Jim Mattis hosts an honor cordon and bilateral statement with Slovenian defense minister.
  • Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg speaks at Georgetown Law Center about her life and work 5:00 p.m.
  • QUOTE OF THE DAY

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    The New York Times reports at least five officials at the Environmental Protection Agency, four of them high-ranking, were reassigned or demoted after raising concerns about spending and management under the agency’s administrator, Scott Pruitt. https://nyti.ms/2Eoc7iC

    The Washington Post reports Trump’s decision to zero in on Jeff Bezos and Amazon.com as his latest Twitter targets highlights a severe fracture in American society. Four times over the past week, the president has criticized Bezos. https://wapo.st/2IvvvfY

    The Note is a daily ABC News feature that highlights the key political moments of the day ahead. Please check back Monday for the latest.

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