Yahoo – AFP,
August 18, 2017
Washington (AFP) - President Donald Trump on Friday finally parted ways with controversial far-right chief strategist Steve Bannon, after weeks of speculation and as the administration reels from the fallout over Trump's response to a violent white supremacist rally.
Washington (AFP) - President Donald Trump on Friday finally parted ways with controversial far-right chief strategist Steve Bannon, after weeks of speculation and as the administration reels from the fallout over Trump's response to a violent white supremacist rally.
Seen as the
driving force behind Trump's nationalist-populist agenda -- making him a hero
of the so-called "alt right" and a bete noire for centrists --
Bannon's presence at the White House has been contested from the start.
He was the
latest in a series of high-profile casualties in Trump's inner circle,
including press secretary Sean Spicer, chief of staff Reince Priebus and
communications director Anthony Scaramucci.
With Trump
under fire from all sides for insisting anti-racism protesters were equally to
blame for violence stemming from a weekend rally staged by neo-Nazis and white
supremacists in Charlottesville, Virginia, the president faced renewed pressure
to let go of his firebrand aide.
In
announcing the 63-year-old Bannon's departure, the White House did not specify
whether he had resigned or -- as was widely reported -- was forced out.
"White
House Chief of Staff John Kelly and Steve Bannon have mutually agreed today
would be Steve's last day," Trump's press secretary Sarah Sanders said in
a statement. "We are grateful for his service and wish him the best."
From
Goldman to Breitbart to West Wing
Labelled a
white supremacist by his critics, the one-time Goldman Sachs investment banker
and former head of ultra conservative outlet Breitbart News joined the Trump
campaign less than three months before the November 2016 vote and was credited
with playing a major role in the real estate magnate's upset victory over
Hillary Clinton.
Having
privately boasted about handpicking Trump's cabinet, he went on to become the
nucleus of one of several competing power centers in what has been a chaotic
West Wing.
But Bannon
reportedly fell into disfavor for allegedly leaking stories about White House
colleagues who he felt did not sufficiently adhere to his populist agenda.
The
president's new chief of staff, Kelly, had reportedly warned he would not
tolerate what he saw as Bannon's behind the scenes maneuvering.
Bannon had
earlier this year lost his coveted place on the National Security Council,
which decides issues of war and peace.
And the
president -- said to have grown increasingly irritated by Bannon's high profile
-- was reportedly furious about an interview his aide gave this week to a
left-leaning publication in which he contradicted the Republican billionaire's
position on North Korea.
The New
York Times quoted a person close to Bannon as insisting the parting of ways was
his own idea, and that he had submitted his resignation on August 7, to be
announced at the start of this week -- but that it was delayed by the chaotic
developments of recent days.
Bannon's
departure came as the US president faced a firestorm of criticism over his
failure to unequivocally rebuke the white supremacists who rallied in
Charlottesville.
That unrest
ended when a suspected Nazi sympathizer drove his car into a crowd of
counter-protesters, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer.
Trump who
rose to political prominence by casting doubt on whether Barack Obama,
America's first black president, was born in the United States, did condemn
neo-Nazis and the Ku Klux Klan on several occasions this week, but many across
the political spectrum say he did not go far enough.
The honeymoon is definitely over. #Trump, the businessman president, begins to lose CEO support https://t.co/FTPMIleNsE pic.twitter.com/ltEc7aMdBc— AFP news agency (@AFP) August 16, 2017

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