![]() In a chapter added in March 2018, Whipple wrote that Trump “clearly has no idea how to govern,” and regardless of his chiefs of staff, “Trump will be Trump.” Kushner’s third choice on his reading list was Chris Whipple’s The Gatekeepers: How the White House Chiefs of Staff Define Every Presidency. ![]() ![]() “Did Kushner understand how negative this was?” Kushner was acknowledging that “Trump’s presidency was on shaky, directionless ground.” He paraphrased the cat: “If you don’t know where you’re going, any path will get you there.” Woodward is stunned. Second, Kushner recommended that observers take a look at the Cheshire Cat in Alice in Wonderland. From his well-informed yet strangely aloof perch, Kushner identifies four writings that he claims “someone in a quest to understand Trump needed to absorb.”įirst was a March 8, 2018, opinion piece by Peggy Noonan titled “Over Trump, We’re As Divided As Ever,” in which she called the president a “circus act” and “a living insult,” whose presidency was characterized by “epic instability, mismanagement, and confusion.” LATE IN BOB WOODWARD’S controversial new book Rage, Jared Kushner, priding himself as the insider’s insider, enters from stage right to offer an assessment of his father-in-law. ![]()
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