There are growing whispers that if John Kelly is eased out or bails
out as White House chief of staff, the job could go to Corey
Lewandowski.
I can report, based on my sources, that the president
and his first campaign manager have discussed that possibility.
Lewandowski has said he would accept a White House post if Trump calls
him off the bench. But in the end it's unlikely to happen.
Still, the mere fact that Lewandowski is on the radar
for the top job, after the campaign fired him in the spring of 2016,
underscores his rising stock and the changing climate.
The president is increasingly focused on the midterms
and, my sources say, believes the combative Lewandowski can be a
valuable asset as Democratic chances of winning the House seem to be
improving.
The signs are unmistakable that Lewandowski, now a
consultant, TV surrogate and chief strategist for America First
Policies, is back in the inner circle.
He and Trump speak regularly on the phone. He joined
the president on Air Force One on the way to a Michigan rally over the
weekend. Trump told the crowd: "Speaking of not being a patsy or a
pushover, you ever watch Corey Lewandowski on the shows? Where's Corey?
Corey!"
In calling Corey up to the stage, Trump said: "He only
ran one campaign and he won. So he’s one for one." Lewandowski declared
to the crowd that "this is Trump country!"
(The president also gave a shout-out to Citizens United
chief Dave Bossie, a Fox News contributor and former deputy campaign
manager.)
Trump wants Lewandowski to accompany him on other
political trips as well. It's well known that the president likes being
surrounded by people he is comfortable with, and the New Hampshire
resident joined his orbit even before the campaign launched.
But Lewandowski is reluctant to take a top White House
job, as Trump well knows. It would mean a huge pay cut for an operative
who has spent two years building a business and has four children to
support.
In an MSNBC interview Tuesday, Lewandowski ducked Chuck
Todd’s question about "people speculating that you should be his chief
of staff," and called Kelly "an American hero" who has "instilled
discipline" in the building. He did not respond to several requests for
comment.
Lewandowski is controversial and has his share of
enemies inside the mansion. White House insiders say that while he is a
trusted adviser to Trump, at least half the staff would resign if he
were tapped as chief of staff. They don't believe Lewandowski, with no
government experience, knows how to run an operation as complex as the
West Wing, and say Trump knows he would be blowing things up by hiring
him. And Lewandowski, for his part, would certainly want to bring in key
aides to support him.
Another potential downside is that if Republicans get
clobbered in November, Lewandowski would get much of the blame. And if
the past is any indication, his tenure would be limited.
And yet chatter about the idea is growing in
conservative circles. American Conservative ran a piece headlined "Corey
Lewandowski: The Chief of Staff Trump Wants."
When Kelly took over last year, he tried to impose
military-style discipline on the White House and limit Trump's contact
with outsider advisers such as Lewandowski. Those restrictions have
loosened as Kelly's authority has ebbed and his relationship with the
president has grown increasingly tense.
Knowledgeable sources say that Trump's relations with
Kelly are indeed strained, that they sometimes fight like brothers, but
that neither one is ready to dissolve the partnership and no change is
imminent.
Kelly called "total BS" on an NBC report that he has
repeatedly called Trump an "idiot," saying they have an "incredibly
candid and strong relationship." But the fact that the account was
leaked to the network by four unnamed sources clearly shows that some in
Trump's orbit are out to get Kelly.
Lewandowski is not part of that effort and has managed to forge a working relationship with the chief of staff.
Trump and Lewandowski discussed a possible senior White
House post a year ago, shortly before Kelly replaced Reince Priebus as
chief of staff. But the president concluded that the timing wasn't
right.
Of course, Kelly may get past the "idiot" flap, repair
his relations with Trump and stay on. Sarah Huckabee Sanders has denied
that he is being considered for the vacancy at VA, which would provide a
soft landing.
If Kelly goes and Lewandowski doesn't get the nod, it's
certainly possible that Trump won't hire a chief of staff, or give
someone the title in name only. He still has no communications director,
two months after Hope Hicks announced her resignation.
The consensus in the White House is that Budget
Director Mick Mulvaney or House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy would be a
more likely replacement, although perhaps as more of an ambassador to
the outside world than someone running the gears of government.
Trump's recent moves in hiring John Bolton and Larry
Kudlow, who have broad independence, suggest the president is more at
ease with a loose structure of trusted confidantes that mirrors the way
he ran his real estate business.
What's clear is that Lewandowski, whatever his title or lack thereof, is going to be one of those voices.
Howard Kurtz is a Fox News analyst and the host of "
MediaBuzz"
(Sundays 11 a.m.). He is the author "Media Madness: Donald Trump, The
Press and the War Over the Truth." Follow him at @HowardKurtz.
Click here for more information on Howard Kurtz.