Inside Trump's evening for the ages: When he learned Mueller was done
Updated 1630 GMT (0030 HKT) March 23, 2019
Washington (CNN)On the evening Robert Mueller submitted his report to the Justice Department,
ending the special counsel investigation tat has clouded all but a few
months of his presidency, President Donald Trump was not huddled in a
war room or dictating defiant tweets to his underlings.
Instead
he was on the tiled patio of Mar-a-Lago, bathed in golden light, with
his wife and son Barron, who had reached teenagerhood two days earlier.
In
the eyes of the President and his aides, many of whom traveled to South
Florida for the weekend, it was a moment to celebrate: the conclusion
of an investigation that did not find enough evidence to indict the
President or his confidants for conspiring with Russia to win the 2016
election.
Whether
the end of Mueller's probe means the end of Trump's long legal
albatross, or just the beginning, is largely a matter for Congress and
the various other prosecutors who have taken on ancillary
investigations.
Even
as Mueller's team vacates the bland Washington office building where
he's been working every day since May 2017, another struggle is
beginning, opening a new chapter Trump will try to control but which he
will write only part of the script.
Still,
Trump and his allies are already signaling the report is an unequivocal
victory, once that exonerates the President from the various misdeeds
-- collusion, obstruction -- that his opponents have used as bywords for
what they regard as a shambolic presidency.
While
there was not a strict plan in place ahead of the report's conclusion,
Trump and his Republican allies immediately launched an effort to cast
the document as absolving him of wrongdoing.
Talking
points distributed by the Republican National Committee encouraged
Trump's allies to stress that "after two years, millions of taxpayer
dollars, and multiple congressional investigations confirming there was
no collusion, it's good this report has finally concluded."
News
the investigation had ended became official on Friday around 5 p.m. ET,
as Trump was discussing trade and Brexit in a businesslike phone call
with German Chancellor Angela Merkel at his Florida club. Earlier, Emmet
Flood -- the White House lawyer tasked with overseeing matters related
to the Russia probe -- received a phone call from an aide to Attorney
General William Barr telling him the report had been delivered to the
Justice Department.
Flood, who
almost never travels with the President, had decided to accompany him to
Palm Beach this weekend, anticipating what all of Washington seemed to
know: that Mueller was nearing the end of his investigation. He helped
comprise a larger-than-usual coterie of aides who descended on the
President's Italianate club.
In
the early evening, many of them were seen milling about the main floor
of the estate, all waiting to learn what might be contained in Mueller's
report. In the days and weeks leading up to the report, there were few
planning sessions to prepare for the document, according to people
familiar with the matter. While vague plans for statements and reaction
were laid, West Wing staffers said there was little to indicate how the
White House would respond once the investigation concluded, and a source
close to the President told CNN Saturday the White House does not have a
war room set up in anticipation of the report's release, unlike the
Clinton administration ahead of the release of former independent
counsel Ken Starr's report.
"I have
no idea about the Mueller report," Trump told reporters on Friday
morning as he headed to Florida, insisting he would be keeping busy at
his resort between a meeting with Caribbean leaders and various other
sessions on trade. Trump himself was kept updated by his team of
lawyers, whom he quizzed periodically about the status of the report
over the last several weeks.
Trump
himself had grown impatient with the waiting game, aides said, which
dominated his beloved cable news for several days. As it became clear
Mueller was nearing the end of his investigation, Trump appeared in a
combative and sometimes foul mood. It was hard to separate the two
things, and aides openly speculated his 50-tweet rage last weekend and
his renewed attacks on Sen. John McCain were an attempt to
counter-program the investigation's end.
A
source close to the President, who spent time playing golf at his
resort on Saturday, told CNN Trump is happy the investigation has
finished and that "no one is panicking" ahead of the next
Mueller-related news. The source added that "we're letting it play out."
Others in Trump's orbit described
him as cautiously optimistic, but with an emphasis on the caution:
Trump did not tweet about the report -- or anything else -- on Saturday.
Those who interacted with him described him as calm.
"What a great man, so down to earth and so fun to be with!!" tweeted the singer Kid Rock, who joined Trump on the golf course.
He posted a photo of photo of himself -- clad in American flag-print trousers -- alongside the President.
On Friday, before the
President sat down to dinner with his family at a cordoned-off table, he
and his lawyer Flood were seen in easygoing conversation. Guests and
aides said Trump was in a spirited mood as he was briefed on various
pieces of information that were emerging from the Justice Department,
including that Mueller was not recommending any further indictments. His
eldest son Donald Trump Jr. -- long the subject of legal speculation --
mingled with guests, his girlfriend Kimberly Guilfoyle by his side.
Later,
he appeared on stage at an fundraiser for the Palm Beach Republicans
underway in the Louis XIV-style ballroom named in his honor. Trump
didn't mention the Mueller report in his remarks -- but as his close
ally Sen. Lindsey Graham was calling on the FBI to investigate Hillary
Clinton, Trump looked on as the crowd broke into a "lock her up" chant.
That
could be a signal of the direction Trump and Republicans plan to head
as the President launches his re-election campaign without the looming
presence of the special counsel.
White
House aides and those close to Trump were universally optimistic on
Friday and Saturday that Mueller's report would provide a boon
politically, showing the Democrats and the media had vastly overstated
the implications of the ongoing probe.
"It's a great day for America," one Trump campaign adviser said. "We won."
"The
fat lady has sung," another White House official said, adding that it's
"absolutely embarrassing" for Democrats who have been predicting a
collusion finding for two years.
Persistent cloud
Whether
the report exonerates Trump or not, it has remained a persistent cloud
on his presidency from the day it was announced in 2017. And it's
colored the first half of the Trump presidency in ways that will forever
be entwined with the country's 45th commander in chief.
He's
cycled through several iterations of a legal team, each offering their
own strategy, from outright cooperation to a campaign to discredit the
entire operation. His current lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, has enjoyed a
late-in-life return to political life as a tottering — and sometimes
wildly off-message — legal guru.
After
recusing himself from oversight of the Mueller prove, Trump's first
attorney general, Jeff Sessions, became a punching bag, never recovering
the President's trust. After more than a year of insults, he departed
last year.
By Trump's own telling,
the investigation had embarrassed him in front of foreign leaders, who
he believed viewed him as less-than-legitimate amid questions about how
he was elected.
Developments kept
popping up as he traveled abroad, from the Justice Department
announcement it was appointing a special counsel days before his very
first foreign trip to the testimony of his former lawyer Michael Cohen
that dominated headlines while he was in Vietnam attempting to broker a nuclear deal with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
Trump's
denunciations of the investigation will be engraved in a modern
political lexicon: "No collusion," "witch hunt" and "hoax" have all been
uttered or tweeted so often they now stand alone as political rallying
cries, devoid of context or any explanation at the President's political
rallies or on his social media.
The
minutia of the investigation have become so engrained in the
President's day-to-day patter, one sometimes forgets how complicated the
whole thing was -- or the revelations that have been discovered as part
of Mueller's probe.
For all of
Trump's talk about "lovers" and "dirty cops" and "12 angry Democrats,"
there have been startling discoveries about the President and his circle
that would not have been uncovered were it not for the special
counsel's work. His former campaign chairman is serving years in prison.
His national security adviser lied to investigators. And Trump himself
has been implicated in a campaign finance crime involving sex with a
pornographic actress.
Those
discoveries have not seemed to damped Republicans' quiet glee at the
comparatively benign ending to the Mueller investigation, though as of
Saturday morning there were few people who could say for certain what
was contained in the report.
Perhaps
the best indication the White House is still holding its breath:
Trump's own silence. Instead of proclaiming victory from the podium of
the Donald J. Trump Ballroom on Friday evening, the President avoided
the topic altogether. Instead, he let the moment speak for itself.
"Enjoy yourselves," he told the crowd.