ANALYSIS: Trump revels in battle with press

— -- President Trump’s first solo press conference in office was a free-wheeling, lengthy look inside the mind of the president less than four weeks into his administration.

Trump also claimed Flynn stepped aside for misleading administration officials, not for his discussions of U.S. sanctions with the Russian ambassador during the transition.

Beyond those headlines of the day, Thursday's press conference shed more light on the attitude and motivations of the 45th president and how he will govern the nation the next four years.

Trump stressed that his administration is not in “chaos,” but being run like “a fine-tuned machine,” refusing to take any responsibility for the missteps and upheaval that have plagued the first month of his presidency.

“Our administration inherited many problems across government and across the economy,” he said. “To be honest, I inherited a mess. It's a mess. At home and abroad. A mess.”

The president is also still focused on his public support, again revealing an apparent defensiveness and an insatiable appetite to take on his detractors. He repeatedly blasted reporters -- specifically CNN -- for their coverage, showing an obsession with watching how he is being portrayed in the news. He even spoke in detail about CNN’s 10 p.m. show, recalled what guests said about him and mentioned television ratings over and over.

“I just see many, many untruthful things,” Trump said of press coverage. “I'll tell you what else I see. Tone. The word tone. The tone is such hatred. I'm really not a bad person, by the way ... I do get good ratings. You have to admit that.”

The other question those voters will be asking is if this is how the president will behave and govern the next four years or if this combative period will come to an end.

The president will be back on the campaign trail this weekend, holding a very early 2020 rally on Saturday in Florida set up by his re-election campaign.

Presidents before him have rallied supporters to back their policy agenda or specific issues, but Trump is rallying backers at this early stage to also show the support he has, and likely trying to bring up those approval ratings he loves to cite.

“I heard -- just heard that the crowds are massive that want to be there,” the president said Thursday, something we are likely to hear repeated about this event and others over the entirety of this administration.