But most of the leaks, certainly the juiciest ones, were coming from the higher-ups-not to mention from the person occupying the topmost echelon. The president couldn't stop talking. He was plaintive and self-pitying, and it was obvious to everyone that if he had a north star, it was just to be liked. He was ever uncomprehending about why everyone did not like him, or why it should be so difficult to get everyone to like him. He might be happy throughout the day as a parade of union steel workers or CEOs trooped into the White House, with the president praising his visitors and them praising him, but that good cheer would sour in the evening after several hours of cable television. Then he would get on the phone, and in unguarded ramblings to friends and others, conversations that would routinely last for thirty or forty minutes, and could go much longer, he would vent, largely at the media and his staff. In what was termed by some of the self-appointed Trump experts around him-and everyone was a Trump expert-he seemed intent on "poisoning the well," in which he created a loop of suspicion, disgruntlement, and blame heaped on others.
( Michael Wolff )
[ Fire and Fury: Inside the ]
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