CPUd
11-29-2016, 02:26 PM
Trump Finds a Phone Friend in President Obama
Donald Trump can phone a friend when he has a question about governing. And most improbably, that valued resource turns out to be President Obama, who took Trump’s call Saturday – and not for the first time.
A 45-minute “consultation” is how White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest described their weekend conversation, one of “a handful” of telephone exchanges the two men have shared since their first face-to-face meeting in the Oval Office, which lasted 90 minutes earlier this month.
Earnest said he was intentionally vague in responding to questions about the number of such calls and topics of conversation, which he refused to describe, to give the president and president-elect the ability to confer in private. He also said he didn’t see the White House announcing future calls between the two men.
Trump’s advisers, focused on efforts to select a cabinet, assemble a White House staff and craft a 100-day agenda with Congress for early 2017, are suddenly touting the president-elect’s pleasure in conferring with the same man he denigrated for years as a potentially illegitimate and “failed” American president.
What do the phone calls signal? The private view inside the White House is that Trump needs all the help he can get while rocketing from private businessman to leader of the free world. In interviews and exchanges with reporters, Obama has diplomatically suggested that Trump’s learning curve is steep, but he has commended him as practical and not ideological.
To that end, the president has publicly pledged to share his insights, hoping he can influence his malleable successor during a transition to governing. Obama told The New Yorker that he believed he’d accomplished 70 to 75 percent of what he set out to do as president during two terms, and he predicted the Trump administration may “roll back” just 15 to 20 percent of those strides.
“There’s still a lot of stuff that sticks,” Obama said.
Among the policies and practices the president has suggested may prove challenging to erase: the Iran nuclear deal; counter-terrorism strategies; provisions of the Affordable Care Act Trump has publicly supported; initiatives with Cuba that American travelers, workers and businesses applaud in the wake of normalized relations; and the widely shared view that infrastructure investments would and should create valuable jobs.
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http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2016/11/29/trump_finds_a_phone_friend_in_president_obama_1324 52.html
Donald Trump can phone a friend when he has a question about governing. And most improbably, that valued resource turns out to be President Obama, who took Trump’s call Saturday – and not for the first time.
A 45-minute “consultation” is how White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest described their weekend conversation, one of “a handful” of telephone exchanges the two men have shared since their first face-to-face meeting in the Oval Office, which lasted 90 minutes earlier this month.
Earnest said he was intentionally vague in responding to questions about the number of such calls and topics of conversation, which he refused to describe, to give the president and president-elect the ability to confer in private. He also said he didn’t see the White House announcing future calls between the two men.
Trump’s advisers, focused on efforts to select a cabinet, assemble a White House staff and craft a 100-day agenda with Congress for early 2017, are suddenly touting the president-elect’s pleasure in conferring with the same man he denigrated for years as a potentially illegitimate and “failed” American president.
What do the phone calls signal? The private view inside the White House is that Trump needs all the help he can get while rocketing from private businessman to leader of the free world. In interviews and exchanges with reporters, Obama has diplomatically suggested that Trump’s learning curve is steep, but he has commended him as practical and not ideological.
To that end, the president has publicly pledged to share his insights, hoping he can influence his malleable successor during a transition to governing. Obama told The New Yorker that he believed he’d accomplished 70 to 75 percent of what he set out to do as president during two terms, and he predicted the Trump administration may “roll back” just 15 to 20 percent of those strides.
“There’s still a lot of stuff that sticks,” Obama said.
Among the policies and practices the president has suggested may prove challenging to erase: the Iran nuclear deal; counter-terrorism strategies; provisions of the Affordable Care Act Trump has publicly supported; initiatives with Cuba that American travelers, workers and businesses applaud in the wake of normalized relations; and the widely shared view that infrastructure investments would and should create valuable jobs.
...
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2016/11/29/trump_finds_a_phone_friend_in_president_obama_1324 52.html