25 August, 2017
Asked about that, Kasich said he thinks it's all right for Trump to speak in Phoenix, citing his free-speech rights.
Todd said, "To give you a sense of how reluctant Republicans are to talk about President Trump this week, not one member of the current Republican leadership in Congress agreed to come on the broadcast this morning".
Steve Bannon's departure marks an nearly complete turnover for President Trump's inner circle in the first seven months of his administration. "We still have a huge movement, and we will make something of this Trump presidency".
Sadly, for Kasich, the only niche he's been able to carve out for himself throughout his 40 years in the pubic limelight is that of the petulant CEO teenager in the room, who knows that if he spikes his bogus calls for unity and bipartisanship with attention grabber jackpot words like "pathetic" and his now patented exclamation of "are you kidding me?" media will lap it up.
Kasich, who ran unsuccessfully for the GOP nomination a year ago, insisted during an appearance on CNN's "State of the Union" that he wants Trump to be successful and that he believes the president can move beyond the controversy over his comments on the Charlottesville violence.
Bringing people together is the bowl of mush Kasich uses as his trump card, even though he has yet to say in words what that "something" is.
"And I think it's a question that people are asking", Schiff added.
"I hope we're going to have stability", Kasich said. Let's all take a deep breath and let's think about what we can do to heal some of the basic issues in this country, which are still out there.
Trump spent most of what he said was a "working vacation" holed up at his private golf club in central New Jersey.
The subject was discussed Friday at the Camp David presidential retreat in Maryland where the president, along with Vice President Mike Pence, met with Defense Secretary James Mattis, the National Security Advisor, Lt.
Sen. Tim Scott, a South Carolina Republican, was an exception, urging Trump on CBS's Face the Nation to spend time with people who have lived through the country's hard racial past.
Trump hopes to move beyond news headlines about his remarks made Tuesday that drew a moral equivalency between white supremacists and counter-demonstrators following a white supremacist rally and violence in Charlottesville, Virginia on August 12. In that regard, the president has made a decision, as he said.
Steven Bannon, now-former Chief Strategist to President Donald Trump, believes that "the Trump presidency that we fought for, and won, is over".