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Concerns grow over Trump’s volatility, unpopularity

WASHINGTON — United States President Donald Trump returns to the Oval Office today after a two-week holiday rife with chaos — and the dark clouds plaguing his fledgling presidency show no signs of clearing.

WASHINGTON — United States President Donald Trump returns to the Oval Office today after a two-week holiday rife with chaos — and the dark clouds plaguing his fledgling presidency show no signs of clearing.

Seven months after taking office, the real estate magnate’s approval rating has plunged to a record low. And far from striking a more unifying tone, Mr Trump’s words and actions continue to feed the sense of a rudderless presidency, lurching from one self-generated crisis to the next.

In perhaps the worst to date, he dealt a crushing blow to his own embattled administration by saying “both sides” were to blame for the bloodshed in Charlottesville, Virginia, following a rally by neo-Nazis and white supremacists.

Mr Al Gore, a former Democratic vice-president, advised Mr Trump to resign. Mr Mitt Romney, a recent Republican presidential nominee, urged the president to “acknowledge that he was wrong” and apologise.

Parts of the business world are now openly voicing exasperation with Mr Trump, as members of his own Republican Party — long “off the record” — grow more audible and assertive.

“The president has not yet been able to demonstrate the stability nor some of the competence that he needs to demonstrate in order to be successful,” said Republican Senator Bob Corker in one chiselled phrase, capturing the growing sentiment that Mr Trump’s unpredictability cannot sustain his four-year presidential term.

With his return to Washington, number one on the president’s to-do list is tax reform.

Delivering on that campaign promise would mark Mr Trump’s first significant legislative achievement since his January swearing-in.

His verbal attacks on top members of Congress have cooled relations between the White House and Capitol Hill, but lawmakers with next year’s midterm elections on their minds also fear an open clash.

Top Republican lawmakers Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell “recognise Trump for what he is, and there’s no love lost”, said politics Professor Larry Sabato at the University of Virginia.

“But they have to protect their members on the ballot in November 2018,” said Prof Sabato. “They have no choice but to work with Trump, and Trump knows that and enjoys playing with them as a cat would a cornered mouse.”

Friday’s ouster of Mr Steve Bannon, Mr Trump’s controversial former chief strategist and key campaign ally, from the White House could be seen as a turning point for an administration in turmoil.

But the timing was disastrous, capping one of Mr Trump’s most catastrophic weeks yet after his series of ambiguous remarks on the white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, which ended with the death of a counter-protester at the hands of a suspected Nazi sympathiser.

Mr Bannon’s departure does offer a semblance of clarity concerning the balance of power in the White House, where Mr John Kelly, a retired Marine general, now reigns as the president’s chief of staff.

But the president’s true agenda remains unclear, and Mr Bannon’s status change from White House power player to outsider has policy experts asking what will remain in the administration of his extreme anti-establishment views.

The 45th US president will have an opportunity tomorrow to set the tone for his return from holiday at a Phoenix, Arizona rally, which could potentially play out in a tense climate.

The increasingly isolated Mr Trump will have to strike the right balance between arousing cheers from his base, a task at which the former reality TV star excels, and sending a message of unity after a week that rattled a nation already on edge — and perhaps permanently besmirched his presidency. AFP

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