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Bannon Returns to Breitbart News Steve Bannon, Back on the Outside, Prepares His Enemies List
(about 2 hours later)
The White House’s loss is Breitbart’s gain. Stephen K. Bannon has always been more comfortable when he was trying to tear down institutions not work inside them.
Stephen K. Bannon, who left his post on Friday as President Trump’s chief strategist, has resumed his role as chairman of Breitbart News, the provocative right-wing website that propelled him to national fame. With his return to Breitbart News, Mr. Bannon will be free to lead the kind of ferocious assault on the political establishment that he relishes, even if sometimes that means turning his wrath on the White House itself.
Hours after his departure from the White House was announced, Mr. Bannon led the evening editorial meeting of his former publication, Breitbart said on its website. Hours after his ouster, he was named to his former position of executive chairman at the hard-charging right-wing website and led its evening editorial meeting. And Mr. Bannon appeared eager to move onto his next fight.
“The populist-nationalist movement got a lot stronger today,” the editor in chief of Breitbart, Alex Marlow, said in a statement. “In many ways, I think I can be more effective fighting from the outside for the agenda President Trump ran on,” he said Friday. “And anyone who stands in our way, we will go to war with.”
Mr. Bannon’s previous tenure as chairman of Breitbart coincided with the site’s move to the epicenter of the nationalist brand of right-wing conservatism that swept Mr. Trump into office last year. His return to the site is likely to reinvigorate Breitbart’s role as a gathering spot for Mr. Trump’s most ardent populist supporters. Among those already in Mr. Bannon’s sights: Speaker Paul D. Ryan; Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader; the president’s daughter Ivanka Trump and son-in-law, Jared Kushner; and Gary D. Cohn, the former president of Goldman Sachs who now directs the White House’s National Economic Council.
The site has been without Mr. Bannon since last August, when the chairman took a role running Mr. Trump’s presidential campaign, injecting the site’s frequent themes illegal immigration and inner-city crime, for instance directly into the presidential election. “The president was buoyed to election by capturing the hearts and minds of a populist, nationalist movement,” Alex Marlow, Breitbart’s editor in chief, said Friday evening. “A lot of it was anti-Wall Street, anti-corporatist, anti-establishment. And now we’re seeing that a lot of these guys remaining inside the White House are exactly the opposite of what we told you you were going to get.”
Although Mr. Bannon said he was no longer involved in the site’s operations, Breitbart’s Washington coverage in recent months has been interpreted through the lens of Mr. Bannon’s priorities in the White House. Mr. Bannon’s long enemies list will include anyone he deems hostile to the nationalist, conservative agenda that he viewed himself as the guardian of in the White House. And his most personal causes will involve some the biggest fights that lie ahead between President Trump and Congress.
Breitbart’s audience fell, too, even as its former chairman helped direct national policy and one of its correspondents landed a rare sit-down interview with Mr. Trump. Most immediately, he has told associates that he wants to ensure that any spending resolution approved next month by Congress includes money to begin construction on the wall that Mr. Trump has promised to build on the southern border.
It can be harder to rattle the establishment while running the establishment, and Breitbart’s web traffic has fallen from its heights of last fall. In July, the site received 12.4 million unique visitors, a drop of 32 percent from the year before, and down nearly half from its peak last November, according to comScore, a cross-platform measurement company. If Congress balks, Mr. Bannon has advised the president to issue a veto, which would trigger a government shutdown.
A provocateur who relished creating controversy, Mr. Bannon started his White House tenure in January by declaring the news media “the opposition party,” and telling the press to “keep its mouth shut and just listen for a while.” His bracing attacks on mainstream journalists remain a defining facet of the Trump administration. “You can’t play by the Marquess Queensberry’s rules,” he often tells colleagues, using a characteristically colorful historical analogy, in this case to the 19th-century code of conduct for boxing.
Several Breitbart journalists said on Friday that they hoped Mr. Bannon’s exit from the White House might re-energize the site’s rebellious spirit and help staff members feel freer to attack Mr. Trump directly. Whether he punches hard is not in doubt. The question that he and other like-minded conservatives see as fundamental for their cause is whether their efforts will have any effect on a White House that they fear is now dominated by people whose worldview is decidedly more left of center than Mr. Bannon’s.
Mr. Bannon’s detractors said they believed he would use Breitbart more as a medium for personal advancement. Mr. Kushner; Ms. Trump; Dina Powell, the deputy national security adviser; and Mr. Cohn have all been the target of unrelenting attacks by Breitbart and others on the right for their efforts to draw Mr. Trump to the political center. The site has routinely dismissed Mr. Cohn as a “globalist” and a “swamp creature”; in headlines, his name would sometimes appear bracketed by globe emojis, to underscore the point also an allusion to the triple parentheses that anti-Semites on social media use to denote Jewish names.
“He will use Breitbart as a battering ram,” said Ben Shapiro, a former Breitbart editor who resigned in part because of disagreements with Mr. Bannon’s leadership of the site. “Steve and subtlety have never shaken hands.” Breitbart has mocked Ms. Powell and Mr. Kushner for partying together in the Hamptons with members of the “fake news” media and Democratic politicians.
“We’re going to have a keen eye to see if Trump is able to continue connecting with his base, as the numbers just become more overwhelmingly globalist, centrist, establishment Democrat, all of those in the mix, and a lot less populist-nationalists,” Mr. Marlow said.
Now the scenario that many conservatives long feared is reality: The centrist aides are going to be largely unchecked.
“With Bannon gone, who is left to help the president shepherd his agenda through the establishment morass that wants to sink it?” said Laura Ingraham, the conservative radio host and author, who is among the most vocal proponents of the tighter immigration and trade policies the president campaigned on. “Conventional Wall Street Republicans didn’t elect Donald Trump, and they won’t save him. A laser beam focus on advancing his policies on trade, tax reform, immigration and infrastructure will.”
The veteran conservative activist Richard Viguerie questioned on Friday whether Mr. Bannon’s ouster was part of a looming “purge of conservatives on the White House staff.”
With Mr. Bannon no longer under any obligation to feign interest in working with Mr. Ryan and Mr. McConnell — whom he privately denigrated to Mr. Trump as backstabbers who would inevitably sell him out — the likelihood of a deepening and potentially paralyzing rift between the Republican Party’s hard-line conservatives and its leadership has only grown.
Congressional Republicans have never been very enthusiastic about the pieces of Mr. Trump’s agenda that most animated his core supporters. The president’s proposal to cut legal immigration by half over the next 10 years fell flat on Capitol Hill.
He is still waiting for approval of funding to build the border wall — perhaps the central promise of his campaign. And talks to move forward with a major infrastructure improvement package have stalled.
In one bit of parting advice to the president, Mr. Bannon urged Mr. Trump not to sign any government funding agreement that does not contain funding for the wall. But others in the White House have counseled the president not to pick that fight, which would lead to a government shutdown that could have disastrous political consequences. Republicans, in control of the White House and both chambers of Congress, would have no one to blame but themselves.
Breitbart is expected to be unsparing in its coverage of the issue. And Mr. Marlow said the absence of conservatives like Mr. Bannon was not a good sign.
“At Breitbart, our thoughts are that the president can certainly do a great job despite that, but we don’t think that is working for him all that well at the moment,” Mr. Marlow said.
Few who know Mr. Bannon believe he will waste much time before commencing the messy business of turning against the people he had spent the past seven months trying to work with.
“He will use Breitbart as a battering ram,” said Ben Shapiro, a conservative writer and commentator who used to work for Mr. Bannon when he was the executive chairman of the website, before he went to work for Mr. Trump. “Steve and subtlety have never shaken hands.”
In recent days, Mr. Bannon has been an isolated figure, keeping to his temporary office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building next to the West Wing while the White House undergoes renovations. Mr. Bannon stayed behind in Washington while Mr. Trump and other senior aides traveled to the president’s golf club in Bedminster, N.J.
Unable to talk face-to-face with the president and sensing that his days were numbered, Mr. Bannon began to speak more openly with associates about how effective he could be if he returned to Breitbart and led a campaign-style assault against the Washington interests that he believed were preventing Mr. Trump from being the “America First” president he promised to be.
Representative Steve King of Iowa, a conservative Republican and frequent antagonist to his party’s leadership, described Mr. Bannon as closest to the ideology that elected the president. And if Mr. Bannon is able to be a stronger advocate for that ideology outside the White House than he was within, all the better, Mr. King added.
“I want to see him effective in public life,” he said. “And I want to hear his voice, and I want it to have leverage.”